After Decades of Courtship by the West, China’s Communist Party Only More Vile

After Decades of Courtship by the West, China’s Communist Party Only More Vile
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau walks with Chinese Premier Li Keqiang at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on Dec. 4, 2017. (Fred Doufour/AFP/Getty Images)
Omid Ghoreishi
12/13/2017
Updated:
12/16/2017
PERSPECTIVE
During Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s China trip last week, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang reiterated his comments that the two countries are entering a “golden era” in their relationship, notwithstanding that the leaders didn’t agree on launching formal free trade talks.
With exploratory talks to continue, there’s no telling if the two sides will come to an eventual agreement, or whether Beijing will agree to accommodating Trudeau’s requirement for “progressive trade deals.” This is taking place amid warnings that a Canada-China free trade deal could jeopardize NAFTA renegotiations, and that Canadians voiced substantial concerns when Ottawa consulted them on the ramifications of a possible deal.

China’s record on inconsistent rule of law and not living up to its trade commitments, however, should make it clear that even if the communist regime agrees to Trudeau’s requirements, it may not abide by them. China’s track record is exemplified by the huge gap between its WTO commitments and actual practices as well as its horrendous human rights infractions, despite being listed as a signatory of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

As the Liberal government pursues ever closer ties with Beijing, it’s important to take a look back to discover where decades of courtship with the Chinese communist regime has led us.

‘Stronger Relationship’

When Trudeau embarked on his first official China trip last year, he said he raised the issue of human rights with the Chinese leadership. And to his credit, he repeated Canada’s insistence on human rights and freedom of expression publicly to the Canada China Business Council while in Shanghai.

“I think there are ways in which a stronger relationship makes it easier for our two countries to have regular, frank discussions on issues like good governance, human rights, and the rule of law,” he told the audience.

Whether this “stronger relationship” will lead to actual results in improving human rights in the totalitarian-ruled country is the burning question.

Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau shakes hands with Chinese Communist Party leader Mao Zedong in Beijing on Oct.13,1973. (CP Photo)
Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau shakes hands with Chinese Communist Party leader Mao Zedong in Beijing on Oct.13,1973. (CP Photo)

It’s been some 45 years since Pierre Trudeau made his official trip to China in 1973, becoming the first Canadian prime minister to visit communist China and paving the way for other Western democracies to establish ties with the Chinese Communist Party (CCP).

Back then, China was still in the midst of Mao’s notorious Cultural Revolution, initiated in 1966 with violent struggles that saw the persecution of millions through public humiliation, torture, property seizure, and execution.

But the warmer relations did little to deter the CCP from killing thousands of students and other citizens two decades later in Beijing.

“After the Tiananmen Massacre in 1989, the CCP reentered the world stage with a miserable human rights record,” reads an excerpt from The Epoch Times award-winning editorial series “Nine Commentaries on the Communist Party.

“History gave the CCP a choice. Either it could respect its people and truly improve human rights or it could continue to commit abuses inside China while pretending to the outside world to respect human rights in order to evade international condemnation. Unfortunately, consistent with its despotic nature, the CCP chose the second path without hesitation.”

The aftermath of the massacre saw the rise of Jiang Zemin to the CCP leadership and the purge of leader Zhao Ziyang, who was sympathetic to the students.

A Chinese man stands alone to block a line of tanks heading east on Beijing’s Cangan Blvd. on June 5, 1989, in Tiananmen Square, during the 1989 Tiananmen Square Massacre. (AP Photo/Jeff Widener, File)
A Chinese man stands alone to block a line of tanks heading east on Beijing’s Cangan Blvd. on June 5, 1989, in Tiananmen Square, during the 1989 Tiananmen Square Massacre. (AP Photo/Jeff Widener, File)
Ten years later, in July 1999, Jiang went on to launch what has become one of the most brutal campaigns in recent history: the persecution of tens of millions of Chinese citizens who practise Falun Gong, or Falun Dafa, a traditional spiritual discipline that teaches adherence to truthfulness, compassion, and tolerance.
Investigations several years later by former Canadian secretary of state for Asia-Pacific David Kilgour and human rights lawyer David Matas came to the appalling conclusion that the Chinese regime has been using Falun Gong prisoners of conscience to fuel the country’s multi-billion-dollar transplant industry.

“We’re looking at the continuing perpetration of the greatest crime against humanity since the Third Reich, since the days of the Nazis in Germany, with the organ pillaging [from Falun Gong prisoners of conscience] in China,” said Clive Ansley, a human rights activist who practised law in China for 14 years.

“And it’s totally ignored by Western governments simply because they’re too timid to speak out about small things like mass murder for organs, or genocide, or crimes against humanity,” he added.

“Any time there is a clash between human rights and trade, trade trumps every single time.”

‘Wishful Thinking’

So, after all these years, has China succeeded in muffling voices from the West condemning its human rights abuses, rather than the free world getting Beijing to respect the sanctity of human life?
“Many people believe that trade with China will promote human rights, freedom of speech, and democratic reform in China. After more than a decade, it is clear that this assumption is only wishful thinking,” reads the “Nine Commentaries.”

“The CCP behaves like the Mafia by playing the economic card in foreign diplomacy. Whether China’s aircraft manufacturing contract is given to France or the United States depends on which country keeps quiet on the CCP’s human rights issues.”

It may, in fact, be the case that it is Beijing that feels it can talk more candidly about human rights, but only to bluntly get the West to stop its “lectures.”

A 2009 U.S. diplomatic cable published by Wikileaks cites Swedish Ambassador for Human Rights Jan Nordlander saying that China “repeatedly reiterated that these are new times and China is ‘no longer going to sit here to be lectured by you.’”
He Lizhi, a former Amnesty International prisoner of conscience, speaks of his experience being imprisoned and tortured in China, in this file photo. (Faluninfo.net)
He Lizhi, a former Amnesty International prisoner of conscience, speaks of his experience being imprisoned and tortured in China, in this file photo. (Faluninfo.net)

Anyone who sits down with former prisoners of conscience to hear their first-hand experience of being tortured and languishing in prison for their beliefs would know how much external pressure calling for their release can mean for them and their chances of freedom.

Toronto resident He Lizhi, a former Amnesty International prisoner of conscience persecuted in China for his practice of Falun Gong, says international pressure by democratic governments is very effective in helping deter the persecution and buoy the victims’ morale. Conversely, any lifting of this pressure serves to encourage the oppressors.

He Lizhi recalls an experience back in 2002 while he was still illegally imprisoned in China. That year, during the annual U.N. Commission on Human Rights summit in Geneva, a resolution was proposed to condemn China’s human rights record. However, the resolution failed to pass.

“The reaction to that news in China by the regime was one of national celebration,” he said.

Officials at the jail where he was held gathered all the prisoners of conscience together, and the head official told them some “enemy states” wanted to pass a resolution against China but failed.

“This means that the international community is supporting us [the CCP],” the official said.

“Politicians from democratic countries should be aware that when they say something against the crimes happening in China or the crimes against humanity in China, they must publicly condemn it,” said He Lizhi. Merely mentioning human rights in some closed-door meeting won’t have any impact and will be easy for the Chinese leadership to dismiss, he explained.

“Especially the mass murder of Falun Gong prisoners of conscience to harvest and sell their organs for profit is such a huge crime and a huge shame, for all of humankind, but the outside world continues to cooperate in the medical field with China in transplant tourism,” he said.

Influence

Beijing’s ability to get the West to toe its line hasn’t been without attempts to exert influence from the inside. The torrent of media coverage about China’s extreme meddling in Australia’s political system finally prompted Canberra to announce new legislation last week aimed at deterring foreign influence and espionage.
Australian Labor Party's Senator Sam Dastyari speaks to the media in Sydney on Sept. 6, 2016, to make a public apology after asking a company with links to the Chinese Communist Party to pay a bill incurred by his office. (William West/AFP/Getty Images)
Australian Labor Party's Senator Sam Dastyari speaks to the media in Sydney on Sept. 6, 2016, to make a public apology after asking a company with links to the Chinese Communist Party to pay a bill incurred by his office. (William West/AFP/Getty Images)

The new wave of media pressure also saw the resignation this week of Australian senator Sam Dastyari, who had forged close ties with a wealthy Chinese donor linked to the CCP and had taken positions favouring Beijing.

Among those lashing out at the new laws was Andrew Robb, former Australian trade minister and architect of the China-Australia Free Trade Agreement; the legislation requires creation of a public registry for people or organizations seeking to influence the Australian political process on behalf of foreign interests.

FairFax Media reported that Robb, after retiring from Parliament last year, immediately secured an AU$880,000-a-year job with a company with close links to the Chinese regime. Last week, FairFax revealed that Robb’s consulting contract with the company is so vague that he would be paid even if he did nothing on the surface.  Robb has called the public registry “a political stunt” and has accused his former coalition government colleagues of painting him as “treasonous.”

In New Zealand, China-born MP Jian Yang came under public scrutiny earlier this year for his former career of teaching spies in Chinese military academies. Refuting “any allegations that question” his loyalty to New Zealand, Yang has said he is a victim of a racist smear campaign.

China’s overboard efforts to exert influence on Canada’s politics have not gone unnoticed by the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS). In 2010, then-CSIS head Richard Fadden warned that a number of Canadian politicians had developed close links to foreign governments, with China being the most active.

“There are several municipal politicians in British Columbia and in at least two provinces there are ministers of the Crown who we think are under at least the general influence of a foreign government,” he said in an interview with CBC.

It was reported later by The Globe and Mail that one of the politicians Fadden was referring to was Ontario cabinet minister Michael Chan. Chan responded by launching a libel suit against the Globe and stating that he is not a national risk to Canada because of his links to China.

The influence, of course, isn’t just limited to political circles. It can also be observed in works of academia and commentaries in media to shape Canadian public opinion, lending legitimacy to the absurd view that the “Chinese vision of rights”—providing social rights such as food and shelter to the people—should be balanced with “Western values” about basic freedoms and criticisms that China shouldn’t kill or torture its own citizens.

The narratives don’t mention that Marxism was an ideology developed in Europe and imposed on the Chinese people by Soviet-backed militias, surviving until today thanks to a one-party-ruled totalitarian system.

Dangerous Direction

A look at China’s relationship with countries without a healthy democracy and rule of law adds to the overwhelming evidence that the direction its influence is oriented toward can never be a benign one.

An increasing number of dissidents are being “kidnapped” from countries with friendly relations with China, with the host country doing little to deter the abductions—or even helping Beijing with arrests.

In 2015, Chinese-born Swedish scholar Gui Minhai was kidnapped while in Thailand and later imprisoned in China. Earlier that year, Thailand had deported over 100 ethnic Uyghurs to China despite an international outcry that they could face persecution in China.

Canadian citizen Huseyin Celil was arrested in 2006 while in Uzbekistan and extradited to China despite Canada’s protests.

Last year, with Celil still imprisoned, the Liberal government announced that it had agreed to hold talks on a possible extradition treaty with China.

Miss World Canada 2015 Anastasia Lin speaks at a rally outside the Chinese Consulate in Toronto on Nov. 30, 2017, ahead of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s trip to China. Lin called on Trudeau to seek the release of Canadian citizen Sun Qian, as well as family members of Canadian citizens currently illegally imprisoned in China for their practice of Falun Dafa. Lin collected 15,000 signatures by Canadians asking Trudeau to urge Beijing to release Sun and other Falun Gong prisoners of conscience. (Yi Ling/The Epoch Times)
Miss World Canada 2015 Anastasia Lin speaks at a rally outside the Chinese Consulate in Toronto on Nov. 30, 2017, ahead of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s trip to China. Lin called on Trudeau to seek the release of Canadian citizen Sun Qian, as well as family members of Canadian citizens currently illegally imprisoned in China for their practice of Falun Dafa. Lin collected 15,000 signatures by Canadians asking Trudeau to urge Beijing to release Sun and other Falun Gong prisoners of conscience. (Yi Ling/The Epoch Times)
Since then, another Canadian has become a prisoner of conscience: Vancouver resident Sun Qian, a successful businesswoman and founder of a billion-dollar company, who has been detained in Beijing for her belief in Falun Gong since February.

As for Premier Li Keqiang’s declaration that Canada-China relations are entering a “golden era,” Canada would be wise to ensure it’s not “rubbish coated in gold,” as the Chinese idiom goes.

Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.