May 4, 2003 Sunday Home Edition
By: Ross Terrill, Ross Terrill's most recent book is "The New Chinese Empire."
BOSTON- In its 54th year, the Chinese Communist regime displays both success and vulnerability, and
the unsettling arrival of severe acute respiratory syndrome intersects with each.
Battered by the Tiananmen Square tragedy in 1989 and stunned by the collapse of the Soviet Union in
1991, Beijing sought to save Leninism with consumerism. This has worked.
But China still lacks elected leadership and a free press. The top Chinese figure is heir both to
Leninism and Chinese dynastic rule. The citizens of the People's Republic of China are kept in the
dark on sensitive topics. They are trusted with their money, but not with their minds.
Mao Tse-tung offered his people neither money nor information. In 1976, Mao's last year, an
earthquake struck Tangshan, a city east of Beijing. Scientists around the globe knew it was huge.
But Beijing hid the truth, refusing offers of assistance from the U.S. and the United Nations,
though China needed help. Only years later did the government reveal that the quake had killed more
than 240,000 people.
How many of the bodies dragged from the Tangshan rubble would have been kept alive if Beijing had
put saving lives above saving face? The posture of silence and denial bespoke an imperial state. For
the Chinese emperors, an earthquake, flood, famine, epidemic -- even a falling meteor -- was best
left unmentioned because many Chinese believed they portended dynastic
decline. Mao, himself a neo-emperor, linked cosmology and politics, despite his communist
principles. That was one reason why Beijing drew a veil over the Tangshan earthquake.
[...]
A few years later, AIDS became a major problem in China, not in Shanghai and Beijing where
"decadent" Western tourists bedded "innocent" Chinese youths, but in the
poppy-growing country of southwest China near the Myanmar border. Blood-selling in rural China made
the drug-related AIDS problem worse. At first, Beijing told the world China had no AIDS cases at
all.
Telling lies can threaten "stability and unity," just as reporting bad news can. Without
doubt, however, transparency about SARS does risk panic among a jumpy populace.
Initially, after SARS burst out last November in southern Guangdong province, Beijing's response was
similar to its handling of AIDS: Give little news, blame non-Chinese when possible, understate the
cases.
For months, the Chinese party-state did not report the puzzling respiratory illness to the World
Health Organization or its own medical chiefs across the country. Highly infectious, the virus
jumped from south China to Hong Kong. Before the WHO wrenched details from Beijing, it had spread to
a dozen countries (with deaths climbing). Today, SARS is in 27 countries. At least
417 people are dead, half of them in China, and an estimated 6,000 are infected.
In the medically crucial early months, Chinese journalists were told not to write about SARS. When,
terribly late, a WHO team began work in China, it was not permitted to travel to Guangdong. The WHO
was given false statistics about cases and fatalities in Beijing -- for a reason endemic to the
Chinese authoritarian system. Many of the Beijing ill were in military hospitals, and the health
ministry, which deals with the WHO, lacked authority to pry data from the military.
[...]
Medical crises, as globalization advances, drag China's anachronistic behavior into new territory.
Health is both intensely personal and startlingly global. Beijing wants to be open for investment,
but not always to truth. Yet economic freedom and political freedom ultimately cannot be kept apart.
[...]
When truth and power issue from a single fount, the safety valve of free expression is denied,
corruption soars as few care to blow the whistle, and medical science has one hand tied behind its
back. Turning the hose of information on and off at the Politburo's whim in a complex society of 1.3
billion people, if managed intelligently, may extend the regime's life. But where only a diktat from
on high can determine what is "right" or "wrong," "safe" or
"dangerous," enormous risk is run.
[...]