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Tiananmen protest leader wants to return to China
Hong Kong News.Net Thursday 4th October, 2007 (IANS)
Chinese pro-democracy student leader Wang Dan has asked China to allow all political exiles, including himself, to return to China.
'China should stop creating stateless people. China should allow them to go home, at least to die there. Fallen leaves must return to their roots, as the Chinese saying goes,' he said Wednesday in an interview with DPA.
'Cancelling passports, refusing to extend passports, refusing to issue new passports and barring citizens from returning home will create stateless people, and that is just what the United Nations is concerned about,' he said.
'China has ratified two UN treaties on human rights, so China should respect international human rights codes,' he added.
Wang, who is in Taiwan to gather material for his PhD dissertation at Harvard, reiterated his demand to be allowed to return to Beijing.
He has been appealing for the right to return to China since last year, but China has ignored his request.
'My family members made the request to related departments three or four months ago. There has been no response, so it has virtually been rejected,' he said.
Wang, 38, a former history student at the Beijing University, organised the 1989 Tiananmen Square protest for democracy.
After China crushed the protest on June 4, 1989, killing hundreds of hunger-striking students, he was arrested and put in jail.
China released Wang on medical parole in 1998 and allowed him to go to the US. In the same year, China allowed Wang's parents to go to the US to visit him.
Since then, Wang has been leading the overseas pro-democracy movement while studying history at Harvard University. In recent years, he has visited Taiwan many times to attend seminars, give speeches or to launch his book.
Living in Los Angeles, Wang supports himself by working as a freelance writer for Chinese-language publications in Taiwan, Hong Kong and the US.
Still outspoken in criticising China's human rights record, Wang now longs to go home to become a teacher.
Last year he tried, but failed, to go to teach in Hong Hong, the British colony, which returned to Chinese rule in 1997, to pave the way for his return to China.
He said China could benefit from allowing him back before the 2008 Beijing Olympics because it could show the world that Beijing was loosening control on dissidents and has begun to respect human rights.
Beijing was not interested in that idea. So Wang is now demanding to directly return to Beijing, where his parents live.
But the return home is technically impossible because Wang's Chinese passport expired in 2003 and China has refused to renew it or to issue him a new passport.
'I have visited the Chinese consulate general in Los Angeles, but did not succeed,' he told DPA.
'There must be no pre-conditions for my return,' Wang said when asked if he would agree to return on condition that he refrains from pro-democracy activities.
The 1989 pro-democracy movement in Beijing, which lasted for months and gave Chinese the brief hope that the government was going to introduce reform and embrace democracy, ended in bloodshed on June 4, 1989.
Tanks crushed protesting students sleeping in tents at Tiananmen Square.
Helped by sympathisers in Hong Kong, hundreds of pro-democracy leaders fled to Hong Kong to seek asylum in the west, mainly in the US and France.
China has now re-emerged as the world's fastest-growing economy and foreign leaders and politicians, who once condemned China's suppression of the 1989 pro-democracy protests, are flocking to China to improve ties or seek business deals.
Some of the exiled 1989 pro-democracy movement leaders have also changed.
Chai Ling, the eloquent student leader who used to stand beside Wan Dang giving speeches on Tiananmen Square, is now a successful businesswoman in the IT industry in the US, press reports said.
Another student leader in the 1989 pro-democracy movement, Wuer Kaixi, married a Taiwan student while studying at Harvard and has been living in Taiwan for several years.
He runs a software company in Taipei and reportedly returned to China once in recent years for a secret reunion with family members in Macau, a special administrative zone of China.
Some exiled Chinese pro-democracy activists who sneaked back into China were either put in jail or deported to the country where they boarded the flight.
Fully aware of this, Wang Dan plans to keep trying until China's political exiles can return because going home is their basic human right, he feels. Email this story to a friend
Comments on this story
ChineseJew 10-04-07, 04:48 AM |
Tiananmen protest leader wants to return to China
If Wang loves American democrazy so much he should stay there, he probably did find out the fact the democrazy is not what they made it out to be. Wang is just another misguided idiot who is sorry now.
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Whatawaste 10-04-07, 06:30 AM |
Tiananmen protest leader wants to return to China
Totally agreed with ChineseJew, I was brought up in the west and grew up there. The fact is that all this western democracy is not going to work in Asian societies. But unfortunately you have too many students that blindly think western democracy is the best there is. Just a simple example, in Asian culture, once two persons disagree on a personal terms, you will never see them be friend ever again. While in western culture, there is this thing called “patronize” So obviously you are going to get some which may be suitable in the western environment. If China going into western democracy that will be the end of China. And the west will be happy, especially all those Pentagon generals
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Westerner/ xifang ren 10-04-07, 10:54 AM |
Tian an men protest leader wants to return to China
We basically have two problems here....
1. Whether or not democracy is good for China, because it’s a gurantee that Wang will not change his push for western style democracy if he is to be allowed to return to the mainland. And people will folow him because they believe everything that comes out of the west is superior and GOOD.
2. Whether it’s an infringement on his basic human rights to disallow him from returning to China.
I’m from the west and believe in the 'theory’of democracy. There are other elements to be satisfied when reaching for democracy and these very elements prevent the West from achieving true democracy. I’ve lived in China for half my life and studied all about Chinese politics from China an dfrom the West. What we 'WESTERNERS’need to understand is that China is one of the few countries left largely uninfected by our 'westernization''...true there are people in china wearing Levi’s and trying to speak with an american accent!!!
The Chinese government, in a move to meet it’s international commitments, brought on my globalization, aims to create a chinese brand of democracy...i.e. democracy with a socialist twist! Deng Xiao Ping’s idea...part of his san ge dai biao idea.
why? because with a country with 1.3 billion people it’s IMPOSSIBLE to have complete or true democracy. It’s inpossible for America “the father of democracy” to have true democracy....why would you think China would be able to?
These people have a different history, beliefs, xi guan etc....
To attempt to have democracy in its true form in China would lead to the distruction of one of the most promising economies...and distruction of the country itself and all the other developing countries around who have only china to look to for help.
The west demanded other countries implement 'democratic’systems. This caused civil wars and unrest that destroyed the basic infrastructure of these already poor countries, yet the West in its own attempt to get more powerful and rich, neglected these countries even harming their revival with idiotic trade tarrifs......democracy??? I dont think so!!!
2. The other matter of Wang’s return is directly related to the first!. Yes Wang should be allowed to return home. It’s his basic right to be allowed to return to his parents.
But let me ask you this.....
If someone wants to keep someone they 'percieve’as dangerous to society' 'locked away' so they wont be able to return and cause trouble, as they’re sure to do. Would you judge them?
If a rapist is arrested and vows to continue raping people once he’s released....would you judge me for trying to keep him locked up?
Democracy??? please, I’m only human to want to protect my own.
When the 'west’impose heavy taxes or tarrifs on exports from poor countries that could barely afford to make its products isn’t that protecting one’s own????
When because these countries have high debt and can’t generate an income from exports because the 'democratic’countries of the west' refuse to buy their inferior products instead of assisting them to produce better quality products by sharing technology information etc.....when these poor countries are plagued by civil unrest, and roberies, starvation etc because people dont have money.... What do we say then???
In all your preaching of democracy, remember that ....
Freedom of speech could only get you so far....
Look at america.! A country with 'freedom of speech’but nothing important to talk about!!!!
And.....
Why cry for freedom of speech if you cant curse freely anywhere without being locked up???
People, we all need to make the best of what we have, and not try to build brick houses when we only have straw in our hands.
Dont try to be like the WEST with our brick houses, because it’s very cold inside that house.
I dont blame China for wanting to keep Wang out...I understand their need to protect what they have...am not saying it’s right, but I understand it.!
They want to build their straw house, and the West is angry cuz we couldnt make money from selling them our bricks!!!
Comon, say it with me...Democracy?.....PLEASE!!!
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Whatawaste 10-04-07, 10:24 PM |
Tian an men protest leader wants to return to China
Westerner, couldn’t say it better myself! One comment though I am sure SOME of those in the West understand this, to them it’s a game for their own benefits and/or political career, it’s just sophisticated western politics with their international media that makes the rest of the developing countries suffer!
Any countries want success in playing this game will have to win the media game! I guess the likes of China and others are learning this.
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