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LOS ANGELES --- Fleeting images can become perceived realities.
For example, images viewed positively by the American public allow
U.S. political leaders to unlock foreign-aid funds -- and business
leaders to go forward with ambitious foreign-investment schemes.
From this perspective, Myanmar (a.k.a, Burma), long-spurned by American
human rights groups, seems to have advanced one step forward recently,
and China, long wooed by U.S. business, looks to have lost a troubling
step.
Burmas
hated military regime -- known as SLORC -- is seen as not merely
brutal and repressive but also manifestly incompetent. The Burmese
economy is almost as moribund as that of North Korea, the current
prevailing standard of gross national non-product.
But Burmas
public image could change dramatically with the long-awaited release
of the majestically serene Aung San Suu Kyi from house arrest and
political isolation earlier this month. This fearless pro-democracy
leader offers her countrymen a realistic new hope that Burmas
days of darkness are numbered.
Suu Kyi, now
emerging from 19 dreary months of home confinement, vigorously vows
to be more than a political symbol and will instead push for the
transformation of her country into a robust democracy. Suu Kyi has
the standing, both at home and abroad, to do just that. She is revered
by her people as the sainted daughter of Aung San, the hero of Burmas
1948 independence struggle; internationally, she is known as the
1991 Nobel Peace prize winner with a special vision of her country
-- and of all Asia.
Westerners hope
that she will take a rightful place in the current impressive gallery
of major female national leaders in Asia, from Megawati Sukarnoputri
in Indonesia to Gloria Macapagal Arroyo in the Philippines. If she
does -- if the cranky generals actually possess the wisdom to work
with her, not against her -- Burma, though facing massive developmental
and infrastructural problems, could break out of its long decline.
The opposite
image is emerging in China, and it is immediately worrisome and
potentially serious. It is best captured in the title of a disturbing
essay in a recent New York Review of Books, perhaps Americas
leading literary weekly publication: China: The Anaconda in
the Chandelier. The author is distinguished Princeton Prof.
Perry Link, and his thesis is that Beijing seeks to intimidate dissent
and criticism not only on the mainland and in the recently acquired
Hong Kong but also among dissidents, critics and otherwise politically
neutral academics operating at major universities in America.
Those academics
evidently fear that the Beijing government will deny them visas
for entry, opportunities for mainland field research or access to
archives. Writes Link, a widely respected scholar who is anything
but a China-basher: How often such things happen and what
kind of self-censorship results are difficult things to measure
People are reluctant to speak about them (no scholar likes
to acknowledge self-censorship) ... because the crucial functions
are psychological and sometimes highly subtle. They happen within
the recesses of private minds, where even the scholar may not notice
what is happening.
Wary observers
of Chinas ways have for years, of course, been warning of
self-censorship in Hong Kong, that deliciously bustling entrepot
of commercialism and noisy opinion of all stripes. Such self-censorship
would work against the idea of letting independent-spirited Hong
Kong be Hong Kong, rather than a clone of Beijing. This semi-independence
concept was forcefully advanced by the late Deng Xiaoping, Maos
successor as Chinas maximum leader, and enshrined in the slogan
One Country, Two Systems.
But is Beijing
duly honoring that wise conceptual legacy? Recent events at prominent
Hong Kong news-media institutions, including the highly influential
South China Morning Post, may offer fodder, unfairly or not, for
the Link hypothesis that Beijing simply cannot resist the temptation
to hammer down the party line beyond its borders.
The role
of Beijings censorship is demonstrably harmful, concludes
Link. It contributes to distortions both in Chinese perceptions
of the West and in Western perceptions of China.
It would be
a grave mistake for Beijing to continue on any such censorship path,
however subtle. Instead, todays Chinese leaders need to respect
the compelling wisdom of Deng just as todays Burmese generals
need to accept the transcendent importance of Suu Kyi.
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