China will tolerate no disturbances (Xinhua) Updated: 2004-08-09 16:56
The key to our success in modernization, the reform and the opening to the
outside is stability. I have told President Bush that in China the overriding
need is for stability. We must counter any forces that threaten stability, not
yielding to them or even making any concessions. We should not be concerned
about what foreigners say; let them say what they please. They'll only abuse us
for being unenlightened. We have been berated for so many years! But have we
been toppled by their criticisms? Anyway, the affairs of Chinese should be
handled by the Chinese themselves. China cannot afford any disorder: we should
explain that plainly and repeatedly. If we don't, we shall appear to be in the
wrong. We have to send out a signal that China will tolerate no disturbances.
When we size up the situation, we should bear in mind that the workers,
peasants and intellectuals and the great majority of students support the
reform. Tell our comrades to keep calm when problems arise.
Taiwan's concentrated attack on the Four Cardinal Principles shows precisely
that we cannot discard them. Without them, China would be in turmoil.
Of course, we should be careful about the means we use to control the
situation. In particular, we should lose no time in drawing up laws and
statutes, including ones to regulate assembly, association, demonstration, and
the press and publishing. Anything that violates the law must be suppressed.
China cannot allow people to demonstrate whenever they please, because if there
were a demonstration 365 days a year, nothing could be accomplished, and no
foreign investment would come into the country. Tightening our control in this
area will not deter foreign businessmen from investing in China; on the
contrary, it will reassure them. We should make it clear at home and abroad that
the purpose of tightening control is to maintain stability and to facilitate the
reform, the opening to the outside and the drive for modernization.
Over the last ten years our greatest mistake has been our failure in
education. We haven't paid enough attention to the political and ideological
education of young people and to the expansion of education. Intellectuals have
not been given enough pay and other benefits. We have to solve these problems.
(Excerpt from a talk with leading members of the CPC Central Committee March
4, 1989.)
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