China in Hu's Colours: Part I
By B. Raman
"People's democracy", a "moderately prosperous society",
a "scientific outlook on development", a "harmonious
society" and "strengthening the soft power of the Chinese
culture"-----these were the main themes of the proceedings
of the 17th National Congress of the Communist Party of
China, which concluded at Beijing on October 21, 2007.
2. As the Chinese media pointed out, the expression
"people's democracy" was the most frequently used in the
report presented by President Hu Jintao, in his capacity as
the Party Secretary, to the Congress at the beginning of its
proceedings. There were 60 references to it in his report
and it figured repeatedly in the subsequent discussions on
his report.
3. As China nears next year's Bejing Olympics, its
leadership is keen to shed the image of China as an
authoritarian State and to project its image as a genuinely
democratic state---- but it is a democracy in Chinese
colours and not in Western colours. What the Chinese Party
leaders sought to convey to their own people and to the rest
of the world was that what one saw in China is not the rule
of the few over the many, but the rule of the many through
the few, it is a State where decisions are made and power is
exercised not in darkness, but in full sunshine.
4. For China's progress and stability in the future,
political development is as important as economic and social
development. That is what Mr.Hu sought to underline in his
report. What should be the political characteristics of the
Chinese State would be decided by the Chinese people through
their party in accordance with their genius and experience.
It will not be imposed from outside. The Chinese media
quoted Mr. Yang Guangbin, Professor of the Renmin University
of China. as saying: "With more individual freedom, gradual
shaping of unique concept of democracy and solid forming of
institutional arrangements, China-style democracy is
emerging."
5. What are the characteristics of this emerging
Chinese-style democracy? Hu himself drew attention to them
in his report as follows:: The supremacy of the Constitution
and the rule of the law, avoidance of arbitrariness in
decision-making and governance, collective leadership
through the party tempered by a division of individual
responsibilities, democratic centralism moderated by inner
party democracy, decisions based on information and
intellectual support to the decision-making process,
self-management, self-service, self-education and
self-oversight. Mr.Hu emphasised that "power must be
exercised in the sunshine to ensure that it is exercised
correctly".
6. The key points in his report were:
- Public hearings must be held for
the formulation of laws, regulations and policies that
bear closely on the interests of the public.
- The most effective and extensive
way for the people to be masters of the country is that
they directly exercise democratic rights in accordance
with the law to manage public affairs and public service
programmes at the primary level, practice
self-management, self-service, self-education and
self-oversight, and exercise democratic oversight over
cadres. Such practices must be emphasized and promoted
as the groundwork for developing socialist democracy.
- The Party organizations at all
levels and all Party members should act under the
Constitution and laws on their own initiative and take
the lead in upholding the authority of the Constitution
and laws.
- The functions of the government
must be separated from those of economic
enterprises, matters requiring administrative
examination and approval must be reduced, procedures
must be standardised and Government should not intervene
in microeconomic operations.
- Laws and rules of procedure should
be improved to ensure that state organs exercise their
powers and perform their functions within their
statutory jurisdiction and in accordance with legal
procedures.
- The need for continuous political
re-structuring in order to improve political management.
7. While China would continue to be a
one-party State, the Party should avoid any pretension of a
monopoly of wisdom. Non-party intellectuals and technocrats
would have an increasing role in policy-formulation and
governance. One need not have to be a party member in order
to be associated with the Government, but those associated
with the Government---whether they are party members or
not--- must accept party supervision over their functioning.
8. Liberal democracy has two important features: The
right of the people to elect their leaders and to question
in open the wisdom of the decisions taken by the Government.
The Chinese-style democracy would not have these features.
The leaders will be elected by the party cadres in
accordance with party procedures. While there would be a
widest possible public contribution to decision-making by
the leadership, once a decision is made, its wisdom
cannot be challenged. The expression of any reservations or
dissent should be in the darkness of party corridors and not
in open sunshine. However, it was stated that the party has
decided to experiment with direct elections of Party chiefs
in more than 200 townships in Chongqing, Sichuan and Hubei.
(To be continued)
(The
writer is Additional Secretary (retd), Cabinet Secretariat,
Govt. of India, New Delhi, and, presently, Director,
Institute For Topical Studies, Chennai. He is also
associated with the Chennai Centre For China Studies.
E-mail:
seventyone2@gmail.com)