China Dissidents Call for Reform
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL(Asia News) OCT 15,2010.,,9:45 A.M. ET
By JEREMY PAGE
BEIJING—As China's Communist Party elite began an annual meeting Friday, more than 100 Chinese dissidents and rights advocates issued a statement calling for democratic reforms and hailing the Nobel Peace Prize for jailed dissident Liu Xiaobo as a "splendid choice."
The statement is the latest contribution to an unusual public debate that has been raging since Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao made a surprise call for political reform in a speech in the southern city of Shenzhen in August.
The statement, circulating on several websites Friday, urged Chinese authorities to "immediately release the people who have been illegally detained" since Mr Liu, who was sentenced to 11 years in prison in December for "subversion," won the prize on Oct. 8.
It asked the Party's leaders to respond "with realism and reason" to the award, which the Chinese government has denounced as a "desecration" of the prize and part of a Western conspiracy to undermine a rising China.
Chinese authorities have also placed Mr. Liu's wife, Liu Xia, under effective house arrest. They also have heavily censored online discussion of the award and detained or increased surveillance of fellow dissidents across the country.
"Liu Xiaobo is a splendid choice for the Nobel Peace Prize," said Friday's statement. "He has persevered in pursuing the goals of democracy and constitutional government and has set aside anger even toward those who persecute him."
"In a recent series of speeches, Premier Wen Jiabao has intimated a strong desire to promote political reform," the statement said. "We are ready to engage actively in such an effort."
The statement comes after a group of 23 reformist Communist Party elders and retired academics made a bold appeal, in another open letter published online earlier this week, for the government to lift restrictions on freedom of expression.
Neither appeal is expected to have much direct impact on the Party leadership since both come from known critics of the political system who have spoken out many times before.
Combined with Mr Liu's prize, however, the letters are throwing a spotlight on the sensitive issue just as the Party's 371-member Central Committee begins a four-day meeting to set policy for the next five years.
They are also raising Mr. Wen's profile, at home and overseas, as top Party leaders start to jockey for position—to secure their own promotions, or those of their proteges—ahead of an expected leadership change in 2012.
Those who signed Friday's appeal included constitutional scholar Zhang Zuhua, one of the people who worked with Mr. Liu to draft Charter 08, the call for political freedom for which Mr Liu was sent to prison.
Other signatories included activist lawyer Pu Zhiqiang and Li Datong, a veteran state newspaper journalist who was forced from a top editing job for reporting on sensitive subjects.