Friday, 1 July 2016

Xi Urges Chinese Communist Party to Embrace Marxist Roots

Chinese President Xi Jinping urged the 88-million-strong Communist Party to embrace its Marxist roots on Friday as he delivered an emphatic call for ideological discipline and a vigorous defense of party rule.

The televised speech on the party's 95th anniversary represented one of Xi's most pointed and lengthy addresses laying out his orthodox ideology, and again repudiated the belief held among some observers four years ago that Xi's ascent might usher in liberal political reform.

Xi said that history has proven correct the party's leadership of 1.3 billion people and that its stewardship remains essential for China to realize its “great rejuvenation.”

“History tells us the Chinese people's choice of the Communist Party to lead them toward the civilization's great rejuvenation been correct, and that the party's path of socialism with Chinese characteristics is also correct,” Xi told his audience of cadres gathered in Beijing's Great Hall of the People.

“Marxism must be the basic fundamental, guiding principle,” he said, “or the party would lose its soul and direction.”

Challenged by a slowing economy, Xi has made increasingly frequent appeals for ideological unity, a throwback stance that contrasts with recent Chinese leaders who emphasized delivering economic growth as continued justification for Communist rule.

Since taking power in 2012, Xi has repeatedly called on the party rank-and-file, from officials to academics to journalists, to study Marxism while urging universities to stave off the infiltration of harmful foreign ideas, such as Western liberal democracy.

Although he has been more guarded about his opinions on free-market economics or the role of the state in the market, Xi has forcefully stamped his political mark on Chinese society, attacking liberal thinking within the party, cracking down on public dissent and demanding far greater control over the media and academic institutions.

Despite quoting Deng Xiaoping, China's market-oriented reformer, in a brief passage about the importance of economic development, the Chinese leader did not delve into the economy. Instead, his lengthy address was larded with nationalism and soaring references to the blood and tears that the party had sacrificed for China through the socialist revolution.

Victor Shih, a political science professor at the University of California, San Diego, said the speech underscored the dyed-in-the-wool politics of the Xi administration compared to his technocrat predecessors who more often dressed up economic reforms in Marxist language.

“The longer President Xi has ruled, the more he has revealed his orthodox Marxist-Leninist perspective,” Shih said. “There's nothing like the previous administrations, like Jiang Zemin, with an emphasis on modernizing or reinterpreting Marxism - that was very flexible.”

Drawing on the historical language of socialist-led utopia, the Chinese leader also said China would seek to help the international community but not seek spheres of influence. He won the biggest applause, however, when he warned foreign countries that China would never sacrifice its core interests, sovereignty, security or development plans.

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Thai Junta Vows Continued 'Zero Tolerance’ After Trafficking List Upgrade

Thailand's military government is expressing appreciation for its upgrade on a closely watched index of human trafficking. Meanwhile, officials in Myanmar are lamenting the country being blacklisted in the U.S. State Department's annual Trafficking in Persons (TIP) report.

Thailand, moved up from the lowest Tier 3 to the Tier 2 Watchlist, meaning while the country “does not fully meet the minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking," it made significant improvements last year, according to the report.

“Thailand will by no means be complacent,” the Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a statement. “We remain focused and committed to tackling human trafficking in all forms.”

Prime minister Prayuth Chan-ocha, head of the military junta governing the kingdom, told reporters a "zero tolerance" policy will continue and "I will do my job."

“Thailand has made some great progress that we should all applaud over the past year," the U.S. ambassador to the kingdom, Glyn Davies, said. A number of organizations, however, are criticizing the U.S. decision to upgrade Thailand.

“We are very disappointed at this decision, which does not, in our view, accurately assess the situation on the ground,” said Judy Gearhart, executive director of the International Labor Rights Forum.  “Migrant workers are still one of the most vulnerable groups in the country to human trafficking, and Thailand has not shown any indication that it intends to allow migrant workers greater access to fundamental rights that would protect them from exploitation.”

Thailand should have stayed on the blacklist while Malaysia (which remains on the Tier 2 Watchlist) should have been downgraded to the bottom rung, according to Fortify Rights, which said the two countries, along with Myanmar, “failed to sufficiently combat human trafficking and protect survivors last year.”

Thailand effectively switched places with neighbor Myanmar, the source of an estimated several million laborers in the kingdom, many of them undocumented.

About one-fifth of Thai exports are derived from agricultural and fishery exports – industries rife with abuse of laborers.

FILE - Workers react during a raid on a shrimp shed conducted by Thailand's Department of Special Investigation in Samut Sakhon, Thailand.
FILE - Workers react during a raid on a shrimp shed conducted by Thailand's Department of Special Investigation in Samut Sakhon, Thailand.

Exploitation of migrants has been endemic for decades in the region, with traffickers coordinating with corrupt and complicit officials in government, immigration control, militaries and police forces.

The 2016 TIP report characterizes Myanmar (also known as Burma) as “a source country for men, women, and children subjected to forced labor and for women and children subjected to sex trafficking, both in Burma and abroad.”

Diplomats have also expressed disappointment with a lack of government attention to the plight of the Rohingya, a Muslim minority mostly residing in Rakhine state, who Myanmar does not recognize as a distinct ethnic group.

Since Aung San Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy came to power this year – succeeding military rulers – the government has not shown any flexibility on the Rohingya issue, emphasizing it regards them as Bengalis who illegally migrated from Bangladesh.

Although the TIP report covers the period before the change of government, some observers view the downgrade – in part – as punishment for a continuing hardline on the Rohingya, who annually flee Myanmar in the thousands on rickety boats supplied by traffickers.

Myanmar officials on Friday were contrite about being relegated to the TIP blacklist – along with Haiti, Sudan and Uzbekistan – pledging to continue to battle the traffickers.

“We will not change our course of action on this,” Foreign Ministry Permanent Secretary Aung Lin told VOA. “We’ll continue our effort to take necessary action and to work with all the parties concerned, including the United States.”

A ministry news release about the TIP report made reference to the Rohingya, but did not mention them by name, stating that it had “saved, sheltered and repatriated voluntarily” those “irregular migrants cast adrift in the Indian Ocean” most of whom “were proven not to have originated from Myanmar.”

FILE - Displaced Rohingya men and boys play a Carrom board game in Baw Du Pha Camp 1 outside Sittwe. (P. Vrieze for VOA)
FILE - Displaced Rohingya men and boys play a Carrom board game in Baw Du Pha Camp 1 outside Sittwe. (P. Vrieze for VOA)

Several non-governmental organizations contend political considerations remain an influence on the State Department list, something diplomats have previously acknowledged in private.

The chairman of the U.S. House of Representatives panel on human rights supports the stance that the White House continues to insert such considerations into the global grading system.

“That violates the spirit and letter of the statute,” said Rep. Chris Smith, a New Jersey Republican. “Tier rankings must be earned, not meted out as gifts to economic and security partners.”

The congressman, in particular, singled out China’s Tier 2 Watch List rating, calling the country “the black hole of human trafficking.”

The TIP report ranks countries’ on efforts to combat human trafficking according to standards set forth in the U.S. Trafficking Victims Protect Act. Tier 1 governments meet the minimum standards; Tier 2 nations are making significant efforts to meet the minimum standards while those on the Tier 2 "Watch List" deserve special scrutiny. Tier 3 countries are deemed to have failed to comply with the minimum U.S. standards and are not making significant efforts to do so.

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