Monday, September 17, 2012

Never Trust The Chinese Government...They Lie

Chinese government both encourages and reins in anti-Japan protests, analysts say

By , Monday, September 17, 8:52 AM

BEIJING -- As anger increases over a territorial dispute between China and Japan, Chinese authorities have been playing both sides of the issue by quietly encouraging recent anti-Japanese protests, then publicly reining them in.
Experts point to clear signs that the Chinese authorities have cleared the way and, in some cases, even fueled some of the anti-Japanese protests that have erupted in recent days. At the same time, officials have been careful to keep control over the masses – leery that such gatherings of malcontents could easily turn against China’s government.
China analysts say the two-pronged approach is carefully calibrated to increase pressure on Japan, but it is also driven by domestic politics, as officials jockey for position ahead of the fast approaching, once-in-a-decade leadership transition.
“The party is skilled at manipulating such public opinion….and the signs that these demonstrations were organized by the government is very high,” said Liu Junning, a former researcher at government-related think tank and now an independent political analyst. “The protests come when the leaders need one to come, and the protests will stop when they want them to stop.”
On Monday, Chinese officials sent clear signals they were looking to taper off the protests over the disputed islands -- called Senkaku by Japan and Diaoyu by China -- especially in the face of economic impact to China-Japan trade.
Some Japanese companies temporarily shut down their factories in China on Monday, with reports of temporary work stoppages for brand names such as Nissan, Mazda and Canon. Air tickets from China to Japan have been reported cancelled en masse. Many Japanese-brand stores closed and posted Chinese flags on from their doors to ward off vandals and posters swearing their love and allegiance for China.
The precautions following violent action by protesters over the weekend, including eggs and bottles thrown at the Japanese embassy in Beijing, smashed window businesses and Japanese brand cars bashed in on streets across the country. And in southern parts of the country, protesters clashed at times violently with riot police.
Editorials in most major state-run media in China on Monday called for restraint, “sensible patriotism,” and “levelheadedness.” Authorities also significantly bulked up police presence in Beijing and threatened arrest of “unlawful” protesters in certain regions in preparation of Tuesday’s anniversary of the invasion of China by the Japanese in the 1930s.
The current anger is rooted in widespread bitterness that has lingered in China for decades. Chinese leaders are using those feelings in part for reasons that have little to do with Japan, experts say.
Even as early as last Tuesday, as small groups began demonstrating in front of the Japanese embassy, there were signs of government encouragement. Mistaken for protesters, two journalists passing by the scene were met by plainclothes police officers and instructed where to go to more effectively protest.
Interviews with protesters were also monitored by plainclothes police, who allowed some to express their anger at Japan but swiftly intervened in several cases when questions turned personal, asking about how the protesters had heard of the demonstration and where they worked.
In past cases, such as anti-U.S. protests, local officials have been known to organize students and others, busing them in to increase numbers and even giving out flags for them to wave.
In recent days, Chinese journalists say they have been given instructions by propaganda officials to report on the nationalistic, patriotic nature of the demonstrations but not to emphasize any violence that occurred. Many blog posts criticizing the protests and violence were also wiped off China’s microblogs.
One blog post that quickly went viral compared a protest leader in Xi’an to the ID photo of a local police official, as proof the police were organizing some aspects of the protests – an allegation local police later denied.
But the biggest proof of government encouragement of the protests is that they happened at all.
Communist party officials, anxious about retaining their grip on power, allow virtually no protests critical their own government. Demonstrations, in fact, banned without legal registration.
But there are competing theories about who within the government is encouraging recent anti-Japan protests and why.
Some analysts argue rival factions, such as the security ministry or the military, are using them to gain political power ahead of the leadership change in coming weeks that will appoint China’s top leaders for the next decade. Others point to specific banners and well-organized groups of protesters in outdated Maoist garb in certain areas as proof that supporters of recently fallen leader Bo Xilai are using the anti-Japanese demonstrations as an excuse to push their leftist ideology and rally support for Bo.
Most experts believe the party is using the demonstrations to release built-up pressure and frustration among Chinese citizens and to redirect their attention to foreign issues rather than dwelling on all the mounting internal problems of China.
“Foreign threats are certainly a useful diversion during a period when people would otherwise be paying attention to the domestic issues and leadership,” said Susan Shirk, a former U.S. deputy assistant secretary of state for Asia.
“This is also happening at a moment of succession, when everyone is competing with everyone else for a seat in the system. You can’t go wrong by talking tough on Japan.”

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