by David Matas
(Remarks delivered to a symposium on the crimes of Communism, Kiev Ukraine 14 November 2007
The Chinese constitution states: "The State respects and preserves human rights."[1] But it does not. The problem is not just hypocrisy. Nor is it the inevitable failure we all face to achieve the ideal. The problem is embedded in the constitution itself.
The Chinese state, according to the Chinese constitution, is a
"democratic dictatorship"
[2]. The notion of a democratic dictatorship is a contradiction
in terms. "Democracy" means rule of the people. "Dictatorship"
means that someone is being told what to do, dictated to, by someone
else. For a dictatorship, there are those who give orders and those who
are expected to follow them.
The Chinese constitution defines democracy. The
constitution states that "The state organs of the People's Republic of China
apply the principle of democratic centralism."[3]
Again that is a contradiction in terms. "Centralism" means rule of the
centre, and not of the people who are everywhere and not just in the centre.
The preamble to the constitution refers to a system of
multi-party cooperation and political consultation system under the leadership
of the Communist Party of China. So the "centre" of democratic centralism
in China is the Communist Party. Democratic dictatorship means Communist
Party dictatorship.
Mieczyslaw Rakowski, the last head of the Communist Party in Poland, said, in a speech at a Congress which decided, on June 27, 1990 to disband the party, that the dictatorship of the proletariat became the dictatorship of one party and degenerated into oligarchic or personal tyranny. [4]
What does the Communist Party actually stand for? What is
Communism today? Karl Marx in 1875 defined Communism succinctly with this
slogan: "From each according to his means; to each according to his
needs."
However, Communist states which tried to realize this ideal
collapsed. When the state took away the wealth of those with means, no
one had an incentive to accumulate means. When the state catered to
claimed needs, needs expanded without limit. The work ethic
collapsed. Communist states were states of whining malingerers, with
large numbers of people doing little or nothing but asserting infinite needs
and waiting for the state to meet them.
Chinese Communist Party leader Deng Xiao Ping anticipated the
collapse of Communism and shifted ideologies. He said in 1984, shortly
before the disappearance of Communism from Eastern and Central Europe: "To get
rich is glorious". What he did not say is that there are some ways of
getting rich which are shameful. He introduced a system of anything goes
capitalism, without the rule of law. The arbitrary power of the state
became the arbitrary license to do whatever became necessary to make a buck.
But what was left of Communism when its ideological core was
gutted? More or less nothing except the desire of those already in power
to remain in power. The new Communist slogan became: From each according
to their distance from the people in power; to each according to their
proximity to the people in power.
Jiang Zemin, who succeeded Deng Xiao Ping, attempted in 2002 to
provide a cover for the continuation in power of the Communist Party of China
after the end of Communism with an ideology labelled "the three
represents". Wikipedia, which makes every effort to be neutral, labels
this ideology as "incomprehensible". What is behind the verbal gibberish
is the belief that the Communist Party represents China, that criticism of the
Party is unpatriotic.
Hu Jintao, the current president of China, continued in 2005 in
this ideological vein, with a philosophy labelled "the construction of a
harmonious society". Again, behind the verbal facade, what this
philosophy amounts to is asserting that harmony in society comes from
supporting the rule of the Communist Party.
Yuri Andropov, Brezhnev's successor as head of the Soviet Union, and a former head of the KGB said both candidly and ominously in 1975 "Any citizen of the Soviet Union whose interests coincide with the interests of society feels the entire scope of our democratic freedoms. It is another matter if those interests (of the citizen) ... do not coincide (with the interests of society)".[5] Or, as the Hungarian writer Miklos Haraszti has put it: "Within the Revolution, complete freedom; against the Revolution, none."[6]
Communism today in China is an ideology of repression for those
who object to the rule of the Communist Party, of immunity for those in power
and of wealth accumulation for the ruling clique. For those out of power,
there is nothing in which to believe.
Communism had historically repressed every contrary ideological
movement in order to promote its own ideology. Once the Communist states of
China renounced their own ideology, many beliefs sprung up to take its
place.
The fact that the Communists in China had gutted their own
ideology did not change their old bad habit of repression. On the
contrary, the reflex of repression became ever more dangerous. Once
Communism ceased to stand for anything, the number of people believing in
something other than Communism increased dramatically.
In China, the predominance was Falun Gong, an updating and
intertwining of the ancient Chinese exercise and spiritual traditions.
Falun Gong started only in 1992, after the collapse of the Iron Curtain, with
the writings of Li Hong Zhi. By 1999, from seventy million to one hundred
million adherents had rushed into the ideological vacuum Communism had left
behind.
This number of adherents was more than the then membership of
the Communist Party of China with sixty million members. Chinese
president Jiang Zemin turned green with ideological envy. Nobody could
understand his "Three represents" despite the force of the state behind
it. Tens of millions understood, accepted and acted on the writings of Li
Hong Zhi despite the fact that he was an outsider without any state support or
Communist Party connections.
Let me quote the words of Jiang Zemin. In a letter issued
to the standing members of the Political Bureau of Central Committee of the
Chinese Communist Party April 25, 1999, he wrote:
"Can't the Marxism our communists have, the materialism, atheism
we believe in really win over that suit of stuff aired by Falun Gong? If
that were the case, would it be a thumping joke?"
[7]
Jiang Zemin talks about winning as if Communism and Falun Gong
were in a contest of persuasion for the hearts and minds of the Chinese
people. But this was not a contest Jiang Zemin intended to try to win
fairly. By the time Jiang Zemin got concerned, Falun Gong had already won
this contest hands down. President Jiang decided to reverse history and
impose a Communist victory through force.
As one can see, President resented being a joke. He had to
choose between being laughed at or being feared. Respect, agreement and
understanding were out of the question. Given the choice between being a
jokester or a tyrant, he choose tyranny. He prevailed on the Central
Committee of the Communist Party to ban Falun Gong.
The Falun Gong quickly became the number one target of
repression in China. First came demonization. The incitement to
hatred from the Chinese government against the Falun Gong knew no bounds.
Though they are a group of non-political, non-violent innocents, the Government
of China routinely labels them an evil cult.
Then came arrest and torture to pressure the Falun Gong into
abandoning their beliefs. They represent, according to the UN rapporteur
on torture, two thirds of the torture victims in a country where torture is
chronic.
They represent, according to the United States Department of
State, half of the hundreds of thousands held in Chinese forced labour
detention camps. Many of those arrested refused to tell their jailers who
they were, to protect family and co-workers back home. But their failure
to identify themselves made them especially vulnerable. Those who refused
to recand, who refused to identify themselves just disappeared.
One facet of the Chinese shift from socialism to capitalism was
the withdrawal of funds from the health sector. Hospitals had to find
paying clients to keep their doors open. The most obvious source was
organ transplants. There is global demand for organs because of shortages
everywhere.
China began the organ trade by selling the organs of prisoners
sentenced to death. But the global demand for organs and the health
system need for money quickly outgrew the available death row supply. The
depersonalization of the Falun Gong, their huge numbers in detention and their
vulnerability as an unidentified population meant they became the next
source. Falun Gong were killed in the tens of thousands so that their
organs could be sold to foreigners, generating a billion dollar business for
China. David Kilgour and I wrote a report which is available on the internet
detailing this horror[8].
The dynamic of Communist repression is all too familiar for
Ukraine. The forced Ukrainian famine of 1931 to 1933 and the Chinese
harvesting of organs of Falun Gong practitioners have many features in
common.
� The Ukrainian famine reports, like the reports of Falun
Gong organ harvesting today, were not as widely reported as they should have
been. Walter Duranty, the dean of foreign correspondents in Russia at the
time, the Soviet New York Times correspondent and the 1932 Pulitzer Prize
winner, turned a blind eye to the famine. The rest of the establishment
media followed his lead. It was he who coined the phrase, to justify
Communist oppression, "You can't make an omelette without breaking eggs".
� The few reports of the famine which were made at the time,
like the reports of organ harvesting of Falun Gong practitioners today, were
often not believed. Malcolm Muggeridge in 1933 reported on the famine for
the Manchester Guardian. He visited Ukraine and wrote that he saw full
granaries and starving millions. The Guardian, because of his reports,
fired him. Russia evicted him. His own aunt by marriage Beatrice
Webb, an important figure in England in her own right, called the reports of
Muggeridge "base lies".
� The killings in the Ukraine through forced starvation, like
the killings of Falun Gong through organ harvesting, were ideologically
based. In Ukraine, the ideology at work was forced
collectivization. The enemy the Communists thought they saw and tried to
suppress were the kurkuls, the independent, private enterprise, small business
farmer class.
The Falun Gong today are living today what Ukraine lived through
more than seventy years ago. But there is one big difference between the
kurkul and Falun Gong suffering. The forced famine of Ukraine is long
over. The repression of Falun Gong practitioners in China continues.
David Kilgour and I, in addition to being human rights
researchers and writers, are also human rights activists. Once we came to
the conclusion that Falun Gong practitioners were being killed for their
organs, we could not just stop there. We had to do what we could to stop
this foul practice. Since we released our report, first in July 2000 and
a second version in January 2007, we have together been to over 40
countries. Ukraine is the latest in a long list. All over the world, we
have met with prisoners released from Chinese jails, patients who have had
transplants in China, transplant professionals, foreign affairs officials,
parliamentarians, journalists and activists. We have held press
conferences, and spoken in public fora like today's. This global pressure
has had an impact.
China has enacted a law which came into force May 1, 2007
banning the sale of organs. This law has led to a downturn, though far
from an end, to the sale of organs in China to foreign transplant
tourists. The Chinese Medical Association entered into an agreement with
the World Medical Association in October 2007 promising to end the sourcing of
organs from prisoners. The Chinese Medical Association promise is broad
enough to encompass both prisoners sentenced to death and Falun Gong
practitioners.
The abuse is far from over because China still does not source
organs from proper sources, the sources other countries use - voluntary living
donors and the brain dead, cardiac alive. Though sourcing from voluntary
donors in China is possible, it is not organized. There is no organ
donation structure in China. Moreover, it remains illegal in China to
harvest organs from those who are brain dead but remain cardiac alive.
With respectable sources not available, even a reduced volume of transplants in
China still must source, substantially, from the disreputable sources
traditionally used, those sentenced to death and Falun Gong practitioners.
Our first priority remains to end this abuse. However,
even when it ends, there will be work to be done, the work of memory,
accountability, redress. There can be no immunity, no statute of
limitations for crimes against humanity. There needs to be a remedy to
address the wrongs that have been suffered, by the Falun Gong, by the kurkuls,
by all victims of Communist crimes.
Jiang Zemin has achieved this much. The persecution of the
Falun Gong which he has led is no joke. We can not laugh at mass
murder. We have to take it seriously and do something about it.
Humanity has a lasting record of Nazi criminality through the
International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg. We need a similar tribunal
for Communist criminality. The Charter of the International Military Tribunal
which sat at Nuremberg provides for a "just and prompt trial and punishment of
the major war criminals of the European Axis"[9]. It is too late to have a prompt trial
for the major criminals of Communism. But it is not too late to have a
just trial.
The hammer and sickle of Communist repression remain in a few
countries - China, Cuba, Vietnam and North Korea. But we should not have
to wait for Communism to disappear everywhere to begin the efforts of seeking
redress for the crimes of Communism. We can help end the wrongs of
Communism in the remaining countries where Communism holds sway if we begin the
effort of justice for the crimes of Communism now.
I commend the organizers of this conference for their goal of
establishing legal mechanisms to provide redress for the crimes of
Communism. I endorse that goal, offer what I can do to help and say to
you all, the sooner the better.
................................................................................................................................
David Matas is an international human rights lawyer based in
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.
[1]
Article 33.
[2]
Article 1
[3]
Article 3.
[4]
New York Times, January 28, 1990.
[5]
Izvestiya, June 10, 1975 at page 1, column 1
as translated in Dean, op.cit., page 64.
[6]
"The Velvet Prison", page 120.
[8]
Bloody Harvest: Revised Report into Allegations of Organ Harvesting of Falun Gong Practitioners
in China 31 January 2007 at
<www.organharvestinvestigation.net>
[9]
Article 1.