The Michigan Daily - Monday, April 20, 1998 - 9 Open discussions of reform spread to China's universities The Washington Post BEIJING -The intellectual seeds of liberal politi- cal reform are sprouting here, making this the most open spring since the massive pro-democracy demon- strations in Tiananmen Square were crushed nine years ago. Influential intellectuals here in the capital are talking about promoting individual rights, expand- ing low-level direct elections, shrinking govern- ment and scaling back the ubiquitous role of the Communist Party. A professor from the elite Communist Party school has blasted the "climate of fear" that he says impedes free speech. A leading business newspaper has hailed a "third liberation of thinking" and devoted two pages to excerpts from "Crossed Swords," a book that harsh- ly attacks orthodox Marxist "leftists." "Recently, the general environment has relaxed," said Mao Yushi, whose recent essay, "Liberalism, Equal Status and Human Rights," has put him in demand on China's long-dormant college lecture circuit. On a Saturday night in March, 150 students at the Chinese Geological University here crowded into a lecture hall to hear the 69-year-old economist praise Western liber- alism, denounce the late Communist chair Mao Zedong and call for human rights. Beijing's spring appears to reflect a growing awareness within the party's senior ranks that it must move forward on political reform as Chinese society changes and the economy grows more complex and sophisticated. The party can no longer dictate every aspect of the economy or people's lives, nor easily represent the diverging inter- ests of state workers, entrepreneurs, peasants and city res- idents. What started early this year as a debate among a few influential academics has moved this month into the only in a democratic environment can people dare to voice new opinions... E - Shen Baoxiang Central party school professor AP PHOTO Sinn Fein President Gerry Adams speaks at the end of the Sinn Fein annual conference yesterday in Dublin, Ireland. SinnFeinlets hard-1ines. ven thleir opposition1 state-run mass media, from Shenyang in the northeast to Shenzhen in the south. "Only in a democratic environment can people dare to voice new opinions and can their intelli- gence, wisdom and ability be fully brought into play," central party school professor Shen Baoxiang was quoted as saying by the China Economic Times this month. "If we don't encour- age people to think freely and voice new opinions, our society will actually be utterly stagnant, though it may seem tranquil." Many liberals wield economic arguments, noting that economic progress cannot rely on a handful of officials and experts. China's 1.2 billion people "are not only a 'labor force,' they are also the world's largest thought warehouse and brain. We can thus use the magic weapon of freedom of thought to achieve success," Hu Weixi wrote in a March issue of a mag- azine called Fangfa ("Way"). The opening is limited, and for the time being, true free speech and democracy remain distant. Open debate is a relative concept. For example, Li Bifeng from Sichuan, jailed for five years after the 1989 demonstrations, was arrested again this month for publicizing incidents of labor unrest. Police also seized written materials from Xu Wenli, briefly detaining the veteran dissident who has called on China's legislature to allow independent trade unions and challenged the government to live up to the United Nations human-rights covenant it agreed to sign. Nonetheless, many intellectuals here say this is the most fertile time in a decade for debate about China's political future. Mao, the economist with the same name as the Chinese Revolution leader, traces the relaxation to January, when Reform Magazine's 10th anniversary issue featured a hard-hitting article titled "(We Should) Also Champion Political Reform," by Li Shenzhi, a prominent reformer and the retired Vice president of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. The "implementation of political reform will deter- mine the ultimate success or failure of economic reform," Li wrote. Rejecting the government line that feeding people is the top human-rights priority, Li said China must adopt universal human rights. In February, Mao, who in 1993 retired from the acad- emy and established an independent economic think tank called Unirule, organized a forum to discuss a new Chinese translation of "The Constitution of Liberty," a long-banned book by one of socialism's harshest critics - the late Austrian Nobel laureate Friedrich Hayek, a philosopher and economist. In the 1960 work Hayek argued, "A society that does not recognize that each individual has values of his own which he is entitled to follow can have no respect for the dignity of the indi- vidual and cannot really know freedom." DUBLIN, Ireland (AP)= Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams, seeking to keep his IRA-allied party united on the road to compromise, let hard- liners within his ranks vent their opposition to the Northern Ireland peace accord he helped negotiate yesterday. Adams told his party's annual con- ference that Irish republicans like him would never accept Northern Ireland's existence under British rule. But he hinted they should take seats in a new Northern Ireland Assembly alongside the province's pro-British Protestant majority - a key plank of the peace accord. "I totally reject any notion of accepting the legitimacy of the six- county state or of partition," he said in reference to Northern Ireland and its creation 77 years ago when the rest of Ireland won independence from Britain. He defended the accord as a "mixed bag" that would enable Sinn Fein to pursue its "root objective" - to build its voter support beyond the 17 percent the party already has in Northern Ireland. To reject the accord would mean adopting "a defensive strategy that will emasculate our struggle," he warned in his closing address at the Royal Dublin Society conference center. Adams persuaded the more than 1,000 Sinn Fein delegates to post- pone a decision on the accord until an "emergency" conference in two or three weeks. While he said he would be confident of winning a vote now, he wanted lengthy inter- nal debate first. The delay allows him and his cir- cle of supporters the time to identi- fy outspoken dissidents or waverers and apply pressure before the next high-profile gathering. Crucially, Adams will require more than 66 percent support to amend Sinn Fein's party constitu- tion, which now forbids participa- tion in any Northern Ireland admin- istration. None of the eight participating parties was required to sign the peace accord they negotiated on April 10 in Belfast after 22 months of negotiations. The accord must be approved in public referendums May 22 in both parts of Ireland. The accord creates a new 108- seat Northern Ireland Assembly. But in a nod to Catholic demands for Irish unity, it requires the Protestants and Catholics in that administration to cooperate formal- ly with the Irish Republic in a new North-South Ministerial Council. The major Protestant party, the Ulster Unionists, approved the accord Saturday on a decisive 540- 120 vote - and challenged Sinn Fein to follow suit. Adams gave activists several hours over the weekend to vent their views. Nobody criticized him or Sinn Fein's chief negotiator, Martin McGuinness, both of whom received standing ovations whenev- er they entered the hall. Khmer Rouge remnants seek new role after Pol Pot death coming' ("1 ktis. (re4 AJvkce. NiceAopt - T CHONG SA-NGAM, Thailand (AP) - The remnants of the Khmer Rouge guerrilla group are seeking a new role in Cambodian politics after Pol Pot's death, distancing themselves from their new and equally barbarous leader, Ta Mok. Their attempt to present themselves as less brutal and more conciliatory comes as the United States and Thailand press to bring the blood- stained leaders to justice. Also yesterday, a Thai Army general denied that Pol Pot, the Khmer Rouge leader who died last week, was poi- soned. Pol Pot, one of the century's bloodiest tyrants, was cremated Saturday. His captors said he died of a heart attack. His death dashed hopes that he might be caught and put on trial for leading the genocidal regime that caused the deaths of as many as 2 million Cambodians between 1975 and 1979. Pol Pot was deposed last year as leader of the last Khmer Rouge faction still fighting the government by Ta Mok, the one-legged general known as "The Butcher." But a mutiny against Ta Mok four weeks ago has led to mass defections. In Bangkok, Thailand, the U.S. ambas- sador to the United Nations, Bill Richardson, said the United States and Thailand were cooperating to try to bring Ta Mok and lesser-known but equally bloodstained rebel leaders to justice. "We're all going to make major efforts to find these individuals and bring them to justice," Richardson said after meeting Thai Foreign Minister Surin Pitsuwan. Holdouts in the revolutionary group apparently believe that with Pol Pot dead, the international community will be more willing to accept other Khmer Rouge chieftains if they adopt a differ- ent banner. Defectors supported by the Cambodian army have pressed Ta Mok's dwindling band of die-hards against the Thai border. Many in the rank-and-file are looking for a way out, according to defectors and Cambodian and Thai officials. FARES ARE ROUND TRIP AND 00 NOT INCLUDE, ' TAXES. RESTRICTIONS APPLY. Travel CIEE: Council on International Educational Exchange 1218 South University Avenue Ann Arbor (734) 998-0200 (below Tower Records) WARNING! The October LSAT has been moved to September... 1 9 ...which means BACK TO SCHOOL: moving in, buying books, and class scheduling problems... Z^ Z to- Seniors!! 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