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[Marxism] The Internet in China as a tool of the poor
NY Times, January 16, 2004
Chinese Go Online in Search of Justice Against Elite Class
By JIM YARDLEY
HARBIN, China, Jan. 14 ? On Oct. 16, the day she died, Liu Zhongxia was
riding in her onion cart when it scraped a sedan. Usually her death would
have gotten little attention. But in a country increasingly divided between
rich and poor, a detail stood out: The sedan was a BMW.
Mrs. Liu was a peasant. The driver of the BMW, Su Xiuwen, is the wife of a
businessman. The initial scrape was minor, but after a confrontation, Mrs.
Su drove the car into Mrs. Liu.
The trial in December lasted less than two hours, with Mrs. Su receiving a
suspended sentence. The death was ruled an accident.
And that would have ended it, except for two things. First, the "BMW case"
tapped into sharp class resentments emerging in this Communist country,
which long espoused a classless society. And second, that anger was able to
coalesce in what is becoming an increasingly influential court of appeals
in China: the Internet, which boiled with online outrage.
This week, in a rare step, officials here announced an investigation into
possible judicial corruption in the case, state media reported. There is
already speculation that Mrs. Su could face a harsher verdict, a result
that would appease the online critics but could also set an uneasy
precedent for reformers trying to establish a genuine rule of law in China.
"If the case involved a tractor, I'm sure it wouldn't have attracted any
attention," said Qu Wenyong, dean of the sociology department at
Heilongjiang University in Harbin. "But it involved a BMW, which symbolizes
wealth and power. People immediately associated it with the gap between
rich and poor."
That yawning gap is a fundamental contradiction of China's economic boom.
Wealth is pouring in, swelling the middle class, yet hundreds of millions
still live in poverty.
Here in the northeast, once the country's industrial center but now mired
in unemployment, it is not hard to find class bitterness rubbed raw by the
case. "We ordinary people have to obey the laws," said a taxi driver. Mrs.
Su, he said, does not: "She has the power. She has the privilege. She can
drive wildly."
Initially, the accident barely attracted attention outside Harbin.
That day, Mrs. Liu's husband, Dai Yiquan, accidentally bumped their onion
cart into the side of the BMW, pushing the car about three feet. Mr. Dai,
interviewed at his small village home outside Harbin, said Mrs. Su jumped
out and began hitting him.
Then, after bystanders intervened, she returned to the car, apparently to
back up. But she unexpectedly drove forward, crushing Mrs. Liu and injuring
several others. The car crashed to a halt against a tree.
"My wife was dragged for six or seven meters," Mr. Dai said. He said he
tried to lift her right arm but it was broken. He saw blood coming out of
her mouth. "People said she was already dead," he recalled. "I was just
dumbfounded."
The question at trial was whether Mrs. Su had intentionally tried to harm
Mrs. Liu or had simply mistakenly put the car into first gear instead of
reverse. The trial was notable for its lack of eyewitnesses, though many
saw the incident.
Mrs. Su's husband admitted that he had paid more than $20,000 ? a huge
amount of money in rural China ? to people who were injured, which may
explain why none testified at the hearing.
One of them was Mr. Dai, who said he had received almost $10,000, roughly
eight years' wages. He said he did not even attend the trial. "I just want
peace for my family," a weary Mr. Dai said as one of his two daughters
listened. "I don't care about the verdict and whether it is justice or not."
But China's "netcitizens" cared very much. Editors at Sina.com, the
country's most popular Web site, said that after the verdict, more than
200,000 messages were posted to chat rooms, many suggesting corruption was
to blame.
A spate of stories in the media fueled their anger. Before the verdict,
newspapers in Harbin covered the case lightly; afterward, reporters from
outside the province swept in. Some stories speculated that Mrs. Su was
connected to a politically powerful family. Others quoted Mr. Dai accusing
Mrs. Su of intentionally trying to harm his wife.
Guo Liang, a scholar with the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences who
studies the role of the Internet in Chinese society, said the case was the
latest example of the Net's growing influence. He said Internet protests of
a beating death last year that involved police officers helped prompt a
change in national detention laws. The Net also became a primary source of
information during the initial SARS outbreak.
Mr. Guo noted that while most Internet users are China's urban elite, he
recently finished a study showing that poorer, more rural residents are
increasingly online, renting time at Internet cafes for as little as 12
cents an hour.
"This platform has really changed the situation in China, because everybody
can write something," he said. "They just log on to Sina.com and read all
kinds of newspapers. And the fascinating thing for them is, they get to
leave their comments."
But there are definitely limits. The government methodically arrests
Internet "dissidents" and tightly monitors postings about sensitive
political subjects, like Tibet, Taiwan and Falun Gong, the banned spiritual
movement. Government censors can tolerate unexpected subjects like the BMW
case for weeks ? undoubtedly using them to gauge public opinion ? only to
shut them down abruptly.
Chinese newspaper reporters and online editors say censors did just that
late Wednesday in the BMW case. Newspapers were told to stop reporting and
links to the case were erased from Sina.com. No public explanation was given.
The role of the Internet is particularly complicated for those working to
reform China's legal system. Some analysts applaud the light that online
scrutiny can sometimes shine on the justice system, yet worry about its
influence on legal rulings, particularly when fact and rumor can so easily
get mixed.
Meng Fanxu, a lawyer in Harbin, cautioned that people who had not read the
transcripts of the BMW case should not become the equivalent of judges,
even the thousands of angry ones on the Internet.
"If used properly, the Internet can promote justice and the rule of law,"
Mr. Meng said. But if "carried too far, and in a blind manner, it may
disturb judicial justice and mislead the public to mistrust the law."
Guan Mingbo, Mrs. Su's husband, says the Internet has victimized his
family. He said online speculation that his late father was a prominent
provincial politician was unfounded; he was a government clerk. Mr. Guan,
who owns a development company, said he paid money to Mr. Dai and others as
an apology, and to help cover medical and funeral costs.
"My family has become the victims of the Internet and the newspapers," Mr.
Guan said in a telephone interview. "It has gotten me in turbulent waters."
Asked about suggestions of his wealth and connections, Mr. Guan said: "I am
a common person, too."
His wife, he said, was not a murderer, just a bad driver who did not know
how to handle a car.
In fact, he told state media, he used connections at the local traffic
authority to get her a license in 1997. Otherwise, he said, she would not
have been able to pass the test.
Louis Proyect
Marxism list: www.marxmail.org
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- Thread context:
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- [Marxism] The Internet in China as a tool of the poor,
Louis Proyect Fri 16 Jan 2004, 19:04 GMT
- RE: [PEN-L] [Marxism] Michael Moore and Wesley Clark,
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