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A Nation at the Crossroads
| Article
# : |
11768 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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| Issue
Date : |
4 / 1987 |
2,381 Words |
| Author
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David Chen David Chen is China editor of the South China Morning Post,
published in Hong Kong. |
Early in December 1986, students of the prestigious National University of Science and Technology in Hufei, the provincial capital of east China, took to the streets to demand more liberty.
It was a relatively orderly procession and, to a certain extent, took place with the approval of senior school authorities. In many ways the students' action was the natural consequence of the reformists' endeavor to further release the forces of productivity.
Their action was soon taken up by students of at least another dozen universities, including universities in Shanghai and Beijing, respectively the industrial colossus and the seat of power of the vast People's Republic of China (PRC).
Except for some domestic grievances, the demands of the young people were practically the same: unanimous support for the reform policies that have been the central theme of the authorities in recent years, a faster pace in the political evolution of the system, and an awakening to the need for a greater degree of liberty in all spheres of life.
The authorities' response was sharp. Within a couple of weeks, not only were rallies banned, but drastic action was taken against their immediate instigators and those seen as the root cause of such dissension.
The results were the resignation of the party's top man, Hu Yaobang; the expulsion of three noted activists from the party; and the launching of an "antibourgeois liberalization" campaign that initially appeared to portend all
... (1999 of 14447 Characters)
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