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每日一篇英文中国报道(Washington Post and NY Times)

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发表于 2004-12-25 11:59:57 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式
China's Leader Lauds Policy in Macau in Nod to Hong Kong, Taiwan

By Edward Cody
Washington Post Foreign Service
Tuesday, December 21, 2004; Page A18

BEIJING, Dec. 20 -- President Hu Jintao declared Monday that Macau's booming economy and trouble-free politics prove the wisdom of China's \"one country, two systems\" arrangement and suggested the policy should \"live on\" as the government deals with Hong Kong and Taiwan in the future.

Hu's comments, made in Macau on the fifth anniversary of its return to Chinese control, appeared aimed at disgruntled democracy advocates in Hong Kong who have complained about restrictions imposed by the Beijing government.

While Hu did not mention Taiwan, his endorsement of \"one country, two systems\" as a policy for the future suggested he still sees it as a possible solution for the self-governing island, which China has vowed to reincorporate into the mainland despite its independence-minded leadership.

\"Time has proven that Deng Xiaoping's 'one country, two systems' formula is perfectly accurate and it will continue to exhibit an immense power to live on,\" Hu said, according to the official New China News Agency.

Deng, the late Chinese leader, devised the policy to facilitate Hong Kong's return to Chinese sovereignty in 1997 after 150 years as a British colony. It meant that Beijing, while retaining its own Communist system, was willing to allow a separate system of free-market economics and broad political autonomy in Hong Kong.

A similar arrangement was put into place when China regained control of Macau from Portugal two years later. In practice, however, the policy has functioned differently in the two territories, which share a similar history but have little else in common.

Hong Kong's democracy activists, citing the autonomy pledge, have pushed hard for democratic elections, creating a political problem for the government in Beijing. After a period of agitation, Hu's government declared last April that, for now, it would not allow Hong Kong's legislature and chief executive to be elected by a direct vote.

Hu indirectly criticized Hong Kong's administrators on Monday for not dealing adequately with the problem. At a meeting attended by Hong Kong Chief Executive Tung Chee-hwa after the speech, the president called on Tung and his subordinates to learn from their mistakes.

In contrast, Macau's 450,000 people have embraced limited self-rule without making further demands. They have been encouraged by meteoric economic progress, brought about largely on the strength of millions of mainland Chinese who travel to the tiny enclave to gamble under loosened border controls.

Citing Macau's prosperity and smooth government under Chief Executive Edmund Ho, Hu said the established law in Hong Kong should be strictly followed and political power should remain in the hands of \"patriots,\" Hong Kong citizens who embrace the return to China.

\"These are the very important conclusions that we draw from what has happened since the return of Hong Kong and Macau,\" news agencies quoted Hu as saying. \"The long-term prosperity and stability of Hong Kong and Macau will be guaranteed if we can follow these points, and the 'one country, two systems' arrangement will enjoy a bigger success.\"

After Hong Kong reverted to Chinese control, Beijing officials cited \"one country, two systems\" as a model for Taiwan. But that suggestion has largely dropped from official discourse since the conflict over democracy emerged in Hong Kong and the government blocked direct elections. In that light, Hu's strong endorsement drew particular attention.

Taiwan's president, Chen Shui-bian, and his supporters have made it increasingly clear, however, that they have in mind full independence from China. Officials in Chen's government have cited the European Union or the British Commonwealth, groupings of sovereign states, as examples of how they might reunite.
发表于 2004-12-25 12:27:06 | 显示全部楼层
好心,好辛苦啊,时务轩。
发表于 2004-12-25 13:05:16 | 显示全部楼层
顶顶
 楼主| 发表于 2004-12-26 10:09:46 | 显示全部楼层
NYTimes.com > International > Asia Pacific  

BANLAO JOURNAL

A Corner of China in the Grip of a Lucrative Heroin Habit
By HOWARD W. FRENCH

Published: December 23, 2004


ANLAO, China - The road to this town, treacherous and narrow, ends after miles of knee-deep mud on a mountain path that looks down upon the clouds. It was market day, and the gently sloping main street was so choked with people and goods changing hands that for all the tattered clothes and sun-creased faces, the place radiated a measure of prosperity.

The magic of the larger market that has lifted so much of China out of poverty has bypassed most of this region, where peasants live as they have for generations, carrying firewood on their backs and farming the steep, terraced slopes by hand. But Banlao, otherwise lost in the shadows of tall mountains, where neighboring Myanmar, formerly Burma, looms visible in the distance, has another source of wealth.

The authorities say 10 percent of China's illegal narcotics traffic enters through the surrounding Lancang Prefecture and 85 percent of the arrests in this part of southwestern Yunnan Province are made in this one hamlet.

During a simple lunch of noodles at a sidewalk restaurant, a local man was asked where to look for signs of the illicit wealth. Barely interrupting his meal, he gestured with his head to a storefront across the street. With its slatted doors, big glass windows and new tile roof, it indeed stood out, with the clean look of a Japanese sushi restaurant.

"That was a restaurant built by a drug dealer," the man announced casually. "He was arrested, then executed." As he spoke, he lifted his hand to his head, mimicking a pistol, and pulled the trigger. If what the man was saying was true, it would be a typical fate.

Local folk say that perhaps 70 percent of the shops on the single business street were built by people who made their money in the heroin trade, and that half of those arrested have been executed.

Heroin has a particularly repugnant resonance for the Chinese government, tied up so deeply as it is with the country's subjugation at the hands of Western powers in the 19th century, when British trading companies promoted opium addiction among Chinese as a way, in part, of balancing their trade.

Drug use was almost eradicated under Communist rule but returned after the easing of border controls and social constraints in the 1980's. Since then, year after year of strenuous campaigns have done little to stem the flow of narcotics across the border from Myanmar and Laos.

The poverty here is one cause. The nearest junior high school is still several miles away, on a road so bad that only tractors can navigate it. Electricity arrived five years ago, and mobile phone service came just last year.

Some here say one million yuan, or about $120,000, is not an uncommon payback for those who are willing to hike the 20 miles or so into Myanmar to sneak the drug back into China, where a portion will be sold by crime syndicates for domestic use and the bulk of it exported.

"The police have been fighting this problem intensively since the 1980's, but people are so poor here there's no difference between being alive or dead," said Mo Zaigang, 36, a peasant who together with friends spoke with a stranger in the backyard of a tumbledown, barrackslike home, where peas dried on the ground in the sun. "The only way is going out," he said, using the common shorthand for seeking one's fortune in the drug trade.

As his friends nodded in assent, Mr. Mo added, matter-of-factly: "I am sure you can make a lot of money if you're not caught. Others get nothing, though, and just lose their lives."

With that, the men's conversation shifted to the ebb and flow of misery here, from the severest times they could remember, before the reforms begun 25 years ago, when collective farming was still in force. One man said people ate leaves off trees to survive.

As China's economic liberation gathered speed in the 1980's and the borders opened a bit here, many people became migrant workers on poppy farms in Myanmar, getting their first taste of the heroin trade. Then came outright trafficking, followed by severe crackdowns, with big police sweeps, compulsory re-education programs and frequent executions.

But the enforcement efforts have hardly dented the drug trade because, many here say, poverty is not the only cause. Official corruption, they say, a plague that spares little in China, is also a factor.

Tales abound of how relatives of trafficking suspects have offered large sums of money to the police, only to have the cash disappear and their relatives sent away for imprisonment or execution. In China people can be executed for possession of as little as 50 grams of heroin, less than two ounces.

Whether true or not, other commonly heard stories are more sinister still, involving rumored collusion between Burmese drug lords and the Chinese police.

"eople buy the drugs from a boss in Burma, and the boss informs on them to the police," said Mo Shuli, a resident in another part of the town whose nephew was recently arrested, having been found with a friend in possession of over 1,000 grams, more than two pounds. "The boss takes the money, and the police here get to boast of another success."

Mr. Mo, whose wife cut and diced sections of heart of palm to feed to a hog that grunted impatiently in its pen nearby, made no attempt to claim his nephew's innocence.

"The boy needed money, and nobody warned him in time," he said. "He is locked up now, and has left behind his little daughter. I am sure he is filled with regret."
 楼主| 发表于 2004-12-28 01:15:24 | 显示全部楼层


Fast Food Takes a Bite Out of Chinese Culture
Consumers Crave Convenience of Western Carryout Choices

By Peter S. Goodman
Washington Post Foreign Service
Sunday, December 26, 2004; Page A01

SHANGHAI -- Drained from a morning on the crowded boulevards of this teeming city, Sui Qing and her husband were inclined to find a sit-down restaurant where they could relax while waiters covered their table with a profusion of dishes -- the experience that has for centuries defined Chinese eating.

Their 5-year-old son had other ideas. So the couple submitted to what has become a near-universal experience among the world's parents: They agreed to go to McDonald's.



Shoppers are drawn to a McDonald's in Shanghai, where the menu includes red-bean-paste ice cream sundaes. (Peter S. Goodman -- The Washington Post)  

"It's crowded," Sui said, as her husband navigated six-deep lines at the register, bearing hot chocolate and french fries. "It's not nutritious, and they don't have the variety that a Chinese restaurant would have. But children like it, so we're here."

As the world's most populous nation continues its transformation from a former outpost of communism into a place where spending power reigns, it has come to this: China's cuisine is increasingly being altered by the growing consumption of fast food, with Chinese now more likely than Americans to eat takeout meals, according to a survey released last week by ACNielsen Corp., the market research firm.

The survey, which polled more than 14,000 adults in 28 countries, found that 41 percent of respondents in mainland China eat in a fast-food restaurant at least once a week, compared with 35 percent in the United States.

Elsewhere, 61 percent of Hong Kong residents, 59 percent of Malaysians and 54 percent of respondents in the Philippines say they frequent fast-food places at least weekly, underscoring how Asians are more likely to carry their meal in a bag than people in any other region. By contrast, 11 percent of European adults eat take-out meals weekly, the survey found.

A dozen years have passed since the opening of the first McDonald's outlet in Beijing, which amounted to a cultural spectacle, a landmark in China's then-fledgling engagement with the outside. Steps from where a monumental portrait of Chairman Mao beamed down on Tiananmen Square, 40,000 people lined up to inspect a Big Mac and have their pictures taken with Ronald McDonald.

The opening of a Western fast-food outlet is now an everyday occurrence. McDonald's owns and operates more than 600 stores across 105 Chinese cities, with plans to add more than 100 annually in coming years, according to the company. Kentucky Fried Chicken has more 1,200 shops in China. It opened 270 new outlets this year and plans to launch at least 200 more in 2005, said a spokesman for Yum Brands Inc., which owns the KFC brand.

Where foreign brands in China have often met with more frustration than profit, fast food amounts to a lucrative exception. Major brands have enjoyed striking and visible success, carving into what now stands as a $48 billion-a-year Chinese fast-food industry, according to Bloomberg News. With urban incomes up 40 percent from 1999 through 2003 and city-dwellers increasingly inclined to eat on the run, sales at McDonalds are growing faster here than in the United States.

Fast-food merchants are finding new customers on the strength of aggressive marketing campaigns, often targeted at children and featuring lively colors and cartoon characters. The basketball icon, Yao Ming, is a visible pitchman for McDonald's. They are also capitalizing on a traditional Chinese taste for fried, salty foods, and by providing a clean eating experience in the midst of the some of the most frenetic and hygienically challenged cities in the world.

"It's a decent place, it's clean, they have the music," said Liu Suwen at Jigsaw International, a Shanghai-based market research firm, speaking of restaurants such as McDonald's and KFC. "There's the feel of a Western experience."

Health experts fear the concurrent arrival of another sort of Western phenomenon -- expanding waistlines. About 200 million Chinese are overweight and 60 million are considered obese, according to state press reports. Public health experts view the growing popularity of fast food as a primary contributor to rising rates of diabetes and high blood pressure.

"For young people born in the 1970s and after, lifestyles are not as healthy as before," said Lin Xi, a nutrition expert at the China Academy of Sciences in Shanghai.

Strangely, the uptake of fast food is happening alongside a modern-day Chinese preoccupation with vanity and weight loss. Taxis and buses in seemingly every Chinese city are plastered with ads for slimming potions and appetite suppressants.

The same day ACNielsen issued a press release promoting China's growing stature in the Filet-O-Fish-eating, Pepsi-drinking cosmos, it issued another study asserting that roughly two-thirds of Chinese are swept away by the tide of losing weight, with 80 percent exercising regularly and three-quarters listing health as their primary concern.

But on Saturday, as tired weekend wanderers rested their feet in a jam-packed McDonald's in the center of the city, most dismissed health considerations.

"This is convenient and it tastes good," said Liu Jiahong, 24, partaking in an order of fries as she and a friend recovered from a plunge into the hordes at a department store next door. "I don't care whether it's healthy or not."

At McDonald's restaurants in China, the menu features most of the classics, but some items have been tailored to the local palate, such as red-bean-paste ice cream sundaes and pork burgers.

Price does not appear to be a major consideration for Chinese consumers of fast food. While McDonald's and KFC are not considered particularly expensive by most urban Chinese, they are substantially pricier than many alternatives. Within a three-minute walk of the McDonald's, where a large order of french fries costs more than $2.50, a plate of eight skillet-fried pork buns could be had for 25 cents.

But people said the certainty of a known menu was worth the premium. "If you go to one of these traditional Chinese restaurants, there are big differences between one and another, and you have to know where you are and what to order," said Qian Kun, 20, a college student who was trying a new McDonald's item released in China, the curry beef triangle -- spicy beef wrapped in dough -- and washing it down with a vanilla shake. "Here, there's a standard. A familiar taste. You always know what to expect."

Across the street at KFC, three girls fresh from school made a snack of burgers and soft ice cream cones, the spread underwritten by bi-monthly allowances from their parents.

"Chinese food, that's all I ever ate when I was growing up," said Wen Yannan, 13. "I want something different."

Special correspondent Jason Cai contributed to this report.
发表于 2004-12-28 12:34:33 | 显示全部楼层
终于看完了
真的好辛苦啊
不过以后每天都会努力看
 楼主| 发表于 2004-12-28 12:43:33 | 显示全部楼层
下面是引用pping于2004-12-28 12:34发表的:
终于看完了
真的好辛苦啊
不过以后每天都会努力看

加油,能看完,很不错了,PPING的英文阅读能力看来不错。NY TIMES的难度稍微大一些:)
发表于 2004-12-28 13:10:46 | 显示全部楼层
楼主用心良苦啊
辛苦了
顶一下

一定坚持看下去
 楼主| 发表于 2004-12-29 13:12:09 | 显示全部楼层
NEW YORK TIMES

China Uses Defense Report to Renew Warnings to Taiwan
By CHRIS BUCKLEY

BEIJING, Dec. 27 - The Chinese government said in an annual defense policy report issued Monday that relations with Taiwan were "grim" and vowed that it would accelerate military modernization.

"The Taiwan authorities under Chen Shui-bian have recklessly challenged the status quo," said the Chinese Defense Ministry's white paper for 2004, referring to Taiwan's president, who has pushed for formal acceptance of Taiwan's separate status from mainland China. "China is determined to safeguard its national sovereignty and security, no matter how the international situation may evolve, and what difficulties it may encounter."

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With the customary praise for the Chinese government's foreign and economic policies, the white paper also said China faced growing "uncertainty, instability and insecurity," which it attributed to the United States' military presence. The report said the United States was "realigning and reinforcing its military presence in this region," and also threatening stability across the Taiwan Strait by increasing arms sales to Taiwan.

Defense analysts said none of the statements in the report were strikingly new, but it indicated that China wanted to give its warnings more teeth by accelerating military modernization.

"Basically, they're repeating what they've said before, but it shows they're determined to speed up development of advanced weapon systems," said Andrew Yang, a senior expert on China's military at the Chinese Council of Advanced Policy Studies, a research organization in Taipei. In a telephone interview, he said the report indicated that China would also become more involved in regional military exercises and speed up efforts to integrate its infantry, naval and air forces.

Earlier this month, China announced it would hold joint military operations with Russia next year, the first time the two countries will have held such exercises.

But the defense report also hinted at one of the difficulties facing China's military modernization: reducing its troop numbers so more money can be spent on advanced weapons and better trained personnel. The report repeated a commitment made in September 2003 to cut troop numbers by 200,000 by the end of next year, but it offered no deeper cuts.

"The report is very cautious about troop reduction," said Mr. Yang, the Taipei-based analyst. The mainland government is wary of further cuts at a time when unemployment is widespread and many decommissioned soldiers cannot find work, he said.

The defense white paper appears at a time when China's government is promoting a proposed law about reunification, which would include China's demands that Taiwan accept itself as part of China.
 楼主| 发表于 2004-12-31 12:28:00 | 显示全部楼层
来一篇关于《中国农民调查》的
 楼主| 发表于 2004-12-31 12:35:01 | 显示全部楼层
In China, Turning the Law Into the People's Protector

By Philip P. Pan
Washington Post Foreign Service
Tuesday, December 28, 2004; Page A01

FUYANG, China -- Attorney Pu Zhiqiang sat with the two authors on trial, listening intently and taking notes, his broad shoulders hunched over a small table. Facing him on the other side of the courtroom, Zhang Xide, a short, slightly pudgy Communist Party boss, leaned back and smiled as the first witness took the stand.

Zhang had sued the authors for defamation, accusing them of libeling him in a best-selling book on rural China that portrayed him as a local tyrant. In a country where the courts are controlled by the party, he held the upper hand.

But then Pu, 39, a tall, brawny man with a crew cut, began grilling the witness, an official who had worked for Zhang, and accused him of extracting illegal taxes from peasants, embezzling public funds and killing a man while driving drunk.

"How did you get away with it?" he asked, prompting laughter from the gallery. The witness protested angrily, then refused to answer questions. But Pu pressed on: "You obey the leadership of Secretary Zhang, so aren't your problems Secretary Zhang's problems? Shouldn't he be responsible for you?"

By the time he finished his cross-examination, the mood in the courtroom had begun to change. When the trial ended three days later, the authors remained at the defendants' table, but it seemed as if Zhang -- and the Communist Party itself -- were the ones on trial.

What happened in the Fuyang case highlights a momentous struggle underway in China between a ruling party that sees the law as an instrument of control and a society that increasingly believes it should be used for something else: a check on the power of government officials and a guardian of individual rights. How this conflict unfolds could transform the country's authoritarian political system.

More than a quarter-century after launching economic reforms while continuing to restrict political freedom, the Chinese Communist Party remains in firm control of the courts. Most judges are party members, appointed by party leaders and required to carry out party orders. But the government's claims of support for legal reform and human rights, and an influx of information about Western legal concepts, have fueled public demands for a more independent judiciary.

China's citizens are asserting their rights and going to court in record numbers. About 4.4 million civil cases were filed in the last year, more than double the total a decade ago. Behind this surge in legal activity is a belief that everyone, even party officials, can be held accountable under the law, a belief promoted by a new generation of lawyers, judges and legal scholars trained after the death of Communist Party Chairman Mao Zedong.

The party appears torn by this rising legal consciousness. It recognizes the value of an impartial judicial system to resolve disputes in a country with growing social tensions and an emerging capitalist economy, and it sees the potential of citizen lawsuits to curb corruption and improve governance. But it is also afraid that rule of law and independent courts might threaten its monopoly on power.

A rare chance to sit in a Chinese courtroom unnoticed by the authorities and observe a four-day civil trial in August offered a glimpse into a society's struggle to establish rule of law, and the stark dilemma that presents to the party.

Pu's aggressive defense tactics left the court with a difficult choice. It could ignore the evidence he presented in open court about Zhang's transgressions and rule against the authors, risking a backlash that could further erode the party's legitimacy. Or it could reject Zhang's lawsuit and send a powerful message to the public about the law as a weapon against the party.

Four months after the close of the trial, the court has yet to issue a verdict.

A Free Speech Lawyer

Growing up in rural eastern China, and studying history and classical Chinese literature in university, Pu Zhiqiang had always planned to be a teacher. But he joined the 1989 pro-democracy demonstrations in Tiananmen Square while in graduate school, and in the crackdown that followed, the party barred him from academia.

He drifted for years, working as a secretary, a salesman, even at an agricultural market. But in 1993, a friend suggested he try a career in law. He studied on his own and passed the bar in 1995.

Mao all but dismantled China's legal system during the Cultural Revolution, but after his death in 1976, the party reopened its courts and adopted new laws to promote economic reforms. Demand for legal services grew rapidly, and hundreds of law schools and the first private law firms opened. By the mid-1990s, lawyers were shedding their traditional role in China as civil servants loyal to the state and beginning to see themselves as independent advocates devoted to their clients.

Pu, a gregarious man who speaks in both street profanities and classical Chinese, prospered by helping companies declare bankruptcy and settle business disputes. He also learned how corrupt China's legal system could be. "It was much worse than I imagined," he said.

And yet Pu believed that a good lawyer who took the right cases could change China. In 2003, he agreed to defend a literary critic who had been sued for defamation by one of China's most famous authors. He built his case on one of the principles he had fought for in Tiananmen: free speech.

While preparing for trial, Pu read about New York Times v. Sullivan, the landmark Supreme Court decision on freedom of the press, and used it in his closing argument. The judge handed him a victory.

Over the next year, Pu took on four more defamation cases, defending two magazines, a newspaper and a scholar against lawsuits filed by companies and business tycoons. In a nation where censorship is standard and criticizing the party can lead to prison, he had become China's version of a First Amendment lawyer.

In February, Pu heard about a defamation suit in Fuyang, an urban backwater in the eastern province of Anhui, about 575 miles south of Beijing. A local party official had sued the husband-and-wife authors of "An Investigation of China's Peasantry," a literary exploration of poverty and the abuse of power in rural China.

"I read the book carefully, and it made me furious," Pu recalled. The stories reminded him of his own experiences in the countryside; only a decade earlier, officials enforcing the government's one-child policy had forced his sister-in-law to abort a pregnancy in the ninth month.

The authors already had an attorney, but Pu contacted them and offered his services for free. He proposed turning the case into China's version of New York Times v. Sullivan and argued that society would be better served if the courts protected the public's right to criticize party officials.

Pu said he didn't expect to win. Local party officials control local courts. In Fuyang, Zhang held a top post, and his son was a judge. But if the case attracted enough attention, a sympathetic official elsewhere might stand up for the authors on appeal, or the leadership might decide that letting Zhang win would hurt the party's image too much.

The authors, Chen Guidi and Wu Chuntao, added Pu to their defense team soon after the party banned their book. "We knew we needed a cannon," Wu said.

'The Weapon of the Law'

The trial opened Aug. 24 in a wood-paneled room on the first floor of the Fuyang courthouse. The authors and a team of four lawyers sat on the right, Zhang and his attorneys on the left. Three judges in black robes presided from a bench under the red-and-gold emblem of the People's Republic of China.

About 100 people sat in the gallery, and more than a dozen police officers stood guard. A handful of Chinese reporters were present, though they knew their stories would be censored. Hundreds of peasants from Linquan County, where Zhang had served as party chief, were waiting outside. There were plenty of empty seats inside, but the court let only 25 peasants in.

Zhang's lead attorney spoke first, accusing the authors of fabricating material in the book's third chapter, which described events in Linquan between 1992 and 1995.

The attorney's objections included the book's description of Zhang as an official who spoke like "an uncouth lout" and was "short of stature," and its claim that he ignored Beijing's orders to reduce taxes and violently punished villagers who protested.

"As a senior party member and a qualified cadre who has made no mistakes . . . Zhang Xide is using the weapon of the law to demand justice," the attorney said. He said Zhang wanted an apology and damages of 200,000 yuan, or about $24,000.

The defense responded forcefully. "If a party secretary can't take criticism without considering it defamation, I suggest he quit and go home," declared Lei Yanping, the authors' local attorney.



Lawyer Pu Zhiqiang, center, and client Chen Guidi, at right, brief peasants outside the courthouse about libel trial's progress. (Special To The Washington Post)  

Pu, in a gray shirt and silver tie, spoke next, arguing that his clients' portrayal of Zhang was based on interviews as well as party reports they had obtained. He also noted that their book was a work of "reportage literature," a popular Chinese genre in which writers sometimes embellish facts for literary effect.

But when Pu urged the court to consider whether criticism of an official's performance in office should be considered defamation, the judges refused. "We're not going to include it as a disputed issue in this case," said Qian Weiguang, the chief judge. Pu slapped his forehead in frustration.

A Hush Over the Courtroom

He stepped up his attack the next day, when Zhang's attorneys called their first witness. Pu accused the man, a party official who had worked for Zhang, of embezzlement, collecting excess taxes and killing a man while driving drunk.

"The witness is not a criminal!" one of Zhang's attorneys objected.

"Yes, yes," Pu replied, raising his voice. "But I just want to know, how could someone who had clearly committed a crime not only escape any punishment but then receive a promotion? If Secretary Zhang can interfere with the law -- "

The judge cut him off.

Zhang's attorneys called 13 other witnesses, almost all of them party officials, men with power who were clearly unaccustomed to being challenged. Often, they bristled and refused to answer when pressed by the defense. Sometimes, the chief judge would order them to answer, and they ignored him, too.

The highest-ranking official, a gray-haired county leader named Li Pinzheng, demanded the defense attorneys' names. He also answered his cell phone while on the stand. Later, when an attorney told him to pay attention, he blew up: "You're telling me to pay attention! You're the one who needs to watch out!"

As the defense pressed the witnesses, some revealed damaging details. The book had said officials punished peasants for violating the one-child policy by demolishing their homes and seizing their livestock. But one official who took the stand admitted that the county also had forced couples to be sterilized, requiring it of women even if their husbands had already undergone surgery.

When Zhang's last witness, a peasant named Dai Junming, took the stand, Pu asked him how many children he had. Three, the man replied. Then Pu asked: "Have you been sterilized?"

The courtroom hushed. The witness stared blankly at the lawyer. Pu repeated the question. Again, the man said nothing.

Zhang's attorneys objected, but the judge surprised them, siding with Pu and addressing the witness himself: "lease answer the question. Have you been sterilized?" There was another awkward silence.

Finally, Pu moved on, and asked the witness a different question: "Do you think Zhang Xide was a good party secretary in Linquan County?"

He didn't answer that one either.

On the third day of the trial, Pu began calling witnesses, all of them peasants from Linquan. His cross-examinations had put Zhang on the defensive, but now he seemed like a prosecutor building a case against him. The libel charges were all but forgotten.

One after another, the peasants recalled the events described in the book in damning detail: their suffering at the hands of party officials who demanded illegal taxes; the tough one-child policy campaigns with slogans declaring that it would be better to end seven pregnancies than to allow an extra child to be born; and the appeals for help that took them all the way to Beijing, where 74 of them knelt in protest in Tiananmen Square in 1995.

The most vivid testimony concerned a raid on their village by military police on April 3, 1994. Residents said Zhang ordered the police to punish them for protesting his policies. The officers beat anyone they found and dragged away a dozen people, including some who had nothing to do with the protests, the witnesses said.

"It was worse than when the Japanese ghouls invaded," testified Wang Yongliang, an elderly, white-haired peasant, who said many villagers were so terrified they fled to a neighboring province.

Others, including Wang Xiangdong, 42, a rugged-faced peasant leader, said they were arrested and tortured. "Every officer hit me, and they kept asking, 'Are you tired of living yet?' " he testified.

The last witness was a frail, 69-year-old woman in a flower-print blouse, Zhang Xiuying. Sobbing, she recalled how her husband shouted when police seized him, then suddenly collapsed. The officers left him on the ground, and the villagers were too afraid of the police to help him. He died the next day.

After she finished testifying, the woman suddenly knelt in the well of the courtroom and cried out, "May the honorable judges render justice to my family!" The chief judge shouted for order. But the gallery erupted, and another woman knelt and pleaded for justice, too.

Pu jumped to his feet, wiping away tears, as security officers led the women from the room.

Plaintiff on the Defensive

Zhang Xide sat quietly at the plaintiff's table through much of the trial, sipping tea from a steel thermos. He let his attorneys do most of the talking. But as the trial began spinning out of his control, he smiled less and spoke up more.

"That's a lie!" he blurted out occasionally, drawing rebukes from the chief judge and laughter from the gallery. But for the most part, Zhang stayed cool and casually dismissed the peasants' complaints.

He said party leaders had long ago concluded that the police raid was justified and handled correctly. "Just a few trifles," he said of the corruption allegations. Defending his enforcement of the one-child policy, he said, "Only 20 or so families had their houses torn down."

He also defended his use of county funds to buy a Mercedes-Benz. "I didn't buy it for myself, but for anyone who needed the car for work," he said. Pressed by the lawyers, he added: "This has nothing to do with this case. I have my human rights."

From beginning to end, Zhang maintained that the book was trouble for the party.

"This book doesn't encourage people to obey the law or work hard, but glorifies crime and violations of discipline," he said. "It incites the peasants to protest in large groups, launch surprise attacks on police, steal guns, insult county party secretaries and so on. . . . If 900,000 peasants are guided like this, what kind of result will there be for China?"

He sneered when the defense noted that the book had been critically acclaimed, and he reminded the judges that it had been banned. "Why haven't domestic newspapers and media said anything about it since March?" The book, he said, "was strangled" by the party.

When it came time for Pu to question Zhang, he asked only one question.

"I've been willing to believe you originally didn't know the facts," he said slowly. "But today, facing the suffering of these people, including suffering at the hands of your subordinates, do you have any regrets or remorse or a feeling you let these peasants down?"

Zhang replied: "No."

Waiting for a Verdict

In his closing statement, Pu argued that the authors had a right to criticize Zhang's performance in public office. The law should protect people's rights, he said, not serve as a tool of revenge for officials. But then he broadened his rhetoric, suggesting the trial had shown that not only Zhang but others in the party could be held accountable under the law, no matter how old their crimes.

"This case has given us a chance to reexamine what happened during the reign of party secretary Zhang 10 years ago," he said. "We hope this case will make it clear to hundreds of thousands of officials that they should not abuse their power and oppress the people. . . . All of it will be redressed with time."

Pu ended with a subtle plea to the judges to defy their party superiors.

"Obviously, there is room for you to be creative," he said. "If you are appropriately creative, your efforts and morals will lead society toward the further development of civilization and democracy. Your names will go down in history. . . . Your judgment will show whether the judiciary in China can shoulder its responsibility to promote the development of society."

But the lawyers said the judges have told them they cannot decide the case, which suggests that higher-level party officials are involved. The party's deliberations have been complicated because accounts of the trial have been published on the Internet and in Hong Kong. In a sign of the party's indecision, several officials have contacted the authors and their attorneys and urged them to settle the case.

So far, the authors have refused. "Settling isn't an option," Chen said recently. "We've come this far. We want a verdict."

Researcher Jin Ling contributed to this report.
发表于 2004-12-31 14:20:11 | 显示全部楼层
辛苦老兄了
只是那个国防白皮书讲了等于没讲一样
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