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The Democracy Movement in China


Article # : 15254 

Section : CURRENT ISSUES
Issue Date : 8 / 1989  1,848 Words
Author : Roger A. Brooks
Roger A. Brooks is director of the Heritage Foundation's Asian Studies Center.

       In late April of this year, hundreds of thousands of Chinese students took to the streets in Beijing. Their ostensible catalyst was the April 15 passing of the former Chinese Communist Party Chairman Hu Yaobang, one of China's best-known reformers. The demonstrations continued through the visit to China of Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev from May 17 to 19 and culminated in the now infamous massacre, which, by some reports, took the lives of more than 3,000 Chinese in Tiananmen Square on the weekend of June 3-4.
       
        Set against the background of demonstrations in Beijing and in other cities in China has been a vicious power struggle in the Chinese leadership. This struggle apparently has evolved between, on the one hand, the hard-line, "anxious" reformers, represented by China's Prime Minister Li Peng and China's octogenarian President Yang Shangkun and the "enthusiastic" reformers, or moderates, represented by Communist Party Chief Zhao Ziyang. Although it is still difficult to discern precisely how this leadership divided over the appropriate government response to the demonstrations, it appears that Li and senior leader Deng Xiaoping had advocated the use of force to quell the disturbances, and that Zhao effectively separated himself from the hard-liners by stressing dialogue with the students and by allegedly offering to resign his positions as Communist Party leader. Although several weeks have passed since Deng and other hard-liners managed to force Zhao from power and declare martial law in Beijing, they have failed to organize the Central Committee coalition needed to replace him.
       
        Whatever the outcome of the current power struggle in China, the six weeks of demonstrations in China already symbolize a watershed in the ... (1993 of 11314 Characters)
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