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China's
Zombie Countries - Bringing dictators back to life
Dana Dillon
May 10,
2005
http://www.nationalreview.com/comment/dillon200505100804.asp
In Haitian folklore,
zombies are people reanimated from near death and enslaved to the
witch doctor that revived them. Could it be that China's leaders
are taking their cues from Haiti?
From Burma to
Nepal to Zimbabwe, China is providing political, diplomatic, and
security support to failing dictatorships. Beijing gives just enough
help for the dictator to survive sanctions and domestic popular
revolts, while the PRC gains a dependent state.
The faux-Communist
witch doctors of Beijing are not propping up these unsuccessful
governments for ideological reasons quite the opposite. Nepal is
an absolute monarchy, Burma is a military dictatorship, and Zimbabwe
is governed by a once democratically chosen leader gone bad. In
repayment for reanimating these near-dead regimes, the PRC is demanding
and getting obedience to its nationalistic policies of creating
strategic space around China, isolating Taiwan, securing critical
resources, and guaranteeing markets for Chinese products.
The partial
enslavement of the zombie countries is clearly demonstrated in China’s
newest acquisition, Nepal. Nepal is struggling through a bloody
civil war with Maoist rebels. The Maoists have managed to gain the
upper hand in a large part of the country and can, on occasion,
isolate Katmandu. King Gyanendra's response to his failing counter-insurgency
strategy was to dissolve the government and declare his monarchy
absolute. He then ordered the Nepalese security forces to suppress
all opposition. Consequently, India, the United States and Britain
all condemned the king's actions and cut off military aid to Nepal.
China stepped up with a zombie-making potion of political acceptance
and security assistance.
China's Foreign
Minister, Li Zaoxing, visited Nepal and declared that the King's
seizure of power was "an internal matter for Nepal." For
his part, King Gyanendra announced that "China is a reliable
friend of Nepal." On April 22-24, Gyanendra will visit China
for an economic conference, his first visit abroad since he seized
power.
In exchange
for Beijing's diplomatic support, Nepal is turning on its defenseless
Tibetan refugees. China's ambassador declared that "Nepal is
very important to the stability and prosperity of Tibet." King
Gynandera replied to the Foreign Minister that "Nepal firmly
supports the one-China policy of your government and will never
allow any anti-China activities in Nepal's territory." Gyanendra
subsequently shut down offices representing the Tibetan government-in-exile
that had operated in Nepal since 1960 and began a pogrom of persecution
of Tibetan refugees that included forced repatriations.
Furthermore,
China is enslaving Nepal's economy as well. China is among the top-five
donor countries to Nepal, but Chinese aid is largely aimed at supporting
Chinese businesses and tapping Nepal's natural resources to the
exclusion of Nepalese businesses. Nepal had been pushing for more
equal trade terms to counteract its enormous trade imbalance with
China, but since Gyanendra took over the country concrete remedies
have failed to materialize.
Zimbabwe's descent
to zombie status is no more mysterious than Gyanendra's near-death
experience. Zimbabwe is a resource-rich southern African nation,
suffering a major economic crisis, with inflation at 400 percent
and unemployment at about 70 percent. Zimbabwe's per-capita income
has nosedived over the past eight years from $682 in 1998 to $521
in 2002. President Robert Mugabe abused his office to suppress opposition
parties and maintain his grip on power. His ruling party won an
overwhelming victory in March 2005 in elections not believed to
be free or fair by most Western countries.
Amid sanctions
imposed by the European Union and the United States, China delivered
$240 million in military goods to Zimbabwe including thousands of
AK-47 assault rifles, riot gear, and mobile water cannons. Mugabe's
security forces used the weapons to break up opposition political
rallies and demonstrations. Beijing also provided radio-jamming
equipment to Harare, thwarting pro-democracy broadcasts during the
last "election" campaign.
In return for
China's military equipment, President Mugabe is said to have promised
China land and access to mineral resources. In November 2004, Wu
Bangguo, chairman of the standing committee of China's National
People's Congress, paid a visit to Zimbabwe and signed six economic
agreements. Emmerson Mnangagwa, speaker of the Zimbabwean national
assembly said the national assembly would lay down laws to ensure
that high priority be given to the Chinese enterprises.
Although there
are no Tibetan refugees to persecute in Zimbabwe, Mugabe does his
best to please his new master by helping to isolate Taiwan. The
ministry of foreign affairs of Zimbabwe said in March 2005 that
Zimbabwe firmly supports China's anti-secession law, which authorizes
the use of military force to prevent Taiwanese independence.
Burma and North
Korea have been zombies so long that they may now be in permanent
vegetative states, but the persistence of these two regimes beyond
their long-expected demise is a clear demonstration of the efficacy
of China's policy. Burma has been under strict international sanctions
since it violently suppressed a popular revolt in 1988, but there
is no sign of the junta's imminent collapse. North Korea's economy
completely failed in the 1990s, starving to death an estimated 1.5
million people, but Kim Jong Il blithely clings to power and is
grooming his son as a successor.
Forced to compete
with the American model of representative democracy, the government
of the People's Republic of China offers the third world a non-ideological
choice -liberty or tyranny. Of course, Beijing does not offer this
option to the third world's people, who no doubt yearn for freedom
and prosperity. Instead, the Chinese vision appeals only to failed
despots whose regimes can survive only with Chinese resuscitation
-the Zombies.
*Dana Dillon
is a policy analyst at the Heritage
Foundation.
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