What's new

Liu Xiaobo: China's Nobel public affairs disaster

Bang Galore

ELITE MEMBER
Joined
Feb 21, 2010
Messages
10,685
Reaction score
12
Country
India
Location
India
By John Simpson World Affairs Editor, BBC News

_50386318_010822099-2.jpg

Liu was represented at the ceremony by an empty chair, in what was a public relations disaster for China


Maybe, with hindsight, China would have done things differently.

If it had not made such a huge fuss about the award of the Nobel Peace Prize to Liu Xiaobo, the world's press would not have come to Oslo in such large numbers to report on the ceremony.

And if China had not tried to strong-arm countries with diplomatic representation in Norway and persuade them not to send their ambassadors to the ceremony, then it would not have got into a contest with Europe and the United States - something it was never going to win.

As it was, only 16 other countries, many of them heavily dependent on China, boycotted the award.

Some who changed their minds, like Serbia, showed clear signs of being counter-strong-armed by Europe or the US.

It is unwise to get into diplomatic battles of will with this degree of publicity unless you are likely to win them.

And for Russia to get involved in a dog-fight on the side of a country being heavily criticised for its human rights record was scarcely a very good idea either.

Perhaps China should have done what Iran did, when the Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to the Iranian human rights campaigner Shirin Ebadi.

Countries that boycotted the ceremony

* China, Vietnam, Kazakhstan
* Russia
* Venezuela, Cuba
* Tunisia, Morocco, Sudan, Algeria
* Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Iran, Egypt
* Pakistan, Afghanistan, Sri Lanka


The government in Tehran complained loudly that it was being insulted and traduced, but when Ms Ebadi came to Oslo to pick up her prize, the Iranian ambassador was sitting there at the front of the audience, applauding.

That defused the entire public relations problem for Iran.

Later, in a police raid on some of her property, the golden Nobel medal was confiscated. But by then the fuss, and the international awareness, had long since died down.

Noticeable absence

This has all been a public relations disaster for China.

The symbolism of the empty chair was pretty damaging.

The only regimes that have imposed it on the Nobel Prize Committee in the past have been of a kind which China would not want to be compared with: Nazi Germany, the old Soviet Union, Poland under martial law, Burma.

Other elements of the ceremony increased the embarrassment, such as the children's choir, which sang at the request of Liu Xiaobo himself. He had managed to tell his wife that he wanted this to happen. For the Nobel committee, the children symbolised the future, free of political control and police interference.

Even though he was in his prison cell in China, Liu Xiaobo's presence dominated the entire ceremony as though he were there in person.

The Peace Prize ceremony has come at an awkward moment for the Chinese leadership. During the past few months there has clearly been a battle at the top of Chinese politics about whether to allow a greater degree of free speech.

The conservatives, remembering how glasnost, greater openness, helped to bring down Mikhail Gorbachev's Soviet Union in 1991, demanded that there should be no let-up in the controls on what people can say and write.

Conservative victory

For a time, liberal academics and politicians argued that more freedom of speech would help the general opening up of the country and ease social tensions in China.

It is a battle which the conservatives have so far won. The official line is that Liu Xiaobo is a wrecker, putting everything that China has achieved in danger through a return to anarchy. Many Chinese people clearly agree.

But it is important not to misunderstand what is happening there. Liu Xiaobo may not have been allowed to sit on the platform at the Nobel ceremony, but that does not mean that China is just like all the other practitioners of the empty chair policy.

Why China considers Liu Xiaobo a threat

* 1989: leading activist in Tiananmen Square protests for democratisation; jailed for two years
* 1996: spoke out against China's one-party system; sent to labour camp for three years
* 2008: co-author of Charter 08, calling for a new constitution, an independent judiciary and freedom of expression
* 2009: jailed for subversion for 11 years; verdict says he "had the goal of subverting our country's people's democratic dictatorship and socialist system. The effects were malign and he is a major criminal".


It is not, of course, anything remotely like Hitler's Germany. Nor is it like the Soviet Union.

We have seen from Wikileaks in recent weeks how irritated Chinese officials have become with closed countries like Burma and North Korea.


Senior Chinese civil servants tend to be sophisticated and very aware of the demands of China's new status.

Even China's secret policemen understand that times are different, and that they cannot behave as they once did.

And if you meet Chinese dissidents, most of them - even those under house arrest - will tell you they think things are slowly getting better, and that eventually they will win their ideological battle. Liu Xiaobo seems to think the same way.

To allow itself to be pushed into a position where it can be represented as in some way a successor to the savage dictatorships of the past was a serious miscalculation.

It will not have helped the position of the conservatives whose annoyance and frustration at the Nobel Committee boiled over in this ill-judged fashion.

Maybe the whole Nobel experience will provide important lessons for the next Chinese leadership, which will probably be announced formally in the autumn of 2012.

Liu Xiaobo may have to stay in jail for some time to come. But the award of the Nobel Peace Prize means that the new leadership will see him as a dominant figure in the dissident movement.

BBC News - Liu Xiaobo: China's Nobel public affairs disaster
 
Maybe, with hindsight, China would have done things differently.

If it had not made such a huge fuss about the award of the Nobel Peace Prize to Liu Xiaobo, the world's press would not have come to Oslo in such large numbers to report on the ceremony.

When the CCP makes their emotions "public", it is almost always a very calculated decision. They may rage in private (like over North Korea), but to make it public, such a thing always comes with an underlying political motive.

The most important thing in China is the internal situation, that will always matter more than any external situation.

Liu Xiaobo was an excellent excuse, to unify the Chinese population under the banner of patriotism. And from what I can tell, it looks like it has worked. :azn: It has caused even the non-political Chinese people to defend their own government against external criticism.
 
When the CCP makes their emotions "public", it is almost always a very calculated decision. They may rage in private (like over North Korea), but to make it public, such a thing always comes with an underlying political motive.

The most important thing in China is the internal situation, that will always matter more than any external situation.

Liu Xiaobo was an excellent excuse, to unify the Chinese population under the banner of patriotism. And from what I can tell, it looks like it has worked. :azn: It has caused even the non-political Chinese people to defend their own government against external criticism.

Yeah , but by the same token you need to understand the rest of the world. In democracies they have plenty of people who don't fall for such govt puppeteers. Look at the worlds reaction to Bush/ Cheney as a classic example and the majority of American people's agreement with them. when Nigeria has that news that it indicted Cheney... we did not all band under the patriotism banner in the US, majority said jail him :).

as I said , with great power comes great responsibility on the world stage and China works in the reverse. you may get to be a great economic power, your certainly arrogant about your new found power ( developed countries have voiced that concern)-but you won't ever get to be super power w/ that attitude and respected on the world stage.
 
as I said , with great power comes great responsibility on the world stage and China works in the reverse. you may get to be a great economic power, your certainly arrogant about your new found power ( developed countries have voiced that concern)-but you won't ever get to be super power w/ that attitude and respected on the world stage.

I disagree. I mean just look at the two superpowers of our time - US and Soviet Union.

Even now, US acts with arrogance on the world stage.
 
as I said , with great power comes great responsibility on the world stage and China works in the reverse. you may get to be a great economic power, your certainly arrogant about your new found power ( developed countries have voiced that concern)-but you won't ever get to be super power w/ that attitude and respected on the world stage.

In China, internal affairs are the only thing that truly matters.

Plus, China isn't aiming to be a superpower anyway. See this quote from Deng Xiaoping:

"Keep a cool head and maintain a low profile. Never take the lead - but aim to do something big."
 
Yeah , but by the same token you need to understand the rest of the world. In democracies they have plenty of people who don't fall for such govt puppeteers. Look at the worlds reaction to Bush/ Cheney as a classic example and the majority of American people's agreement with them. when Nigeria has that news that it indicted Cheney... we did not all band under the patriotism banner in the US, majority said jail him :).

as I said , with great power comes great responsibility on the world stage and China works in the reverse. you may get to be a great economic power, your certainly arrogant about your new found power ( developed countries have voiced that concern)-but you won't ever get to be super power w/ that attitude and respected on the world stage.

india is the true superpower. chinese are just your servants. you are total, super powerful, best country in the universe and ultimate masters of earth. russia pays you tribute with technology and all you have to do is offer them some worthless paper, they're so scared of you, everyone is scared of india.
 
india is the true superpower. chinese are just your servants. you are total, super powerful, best country in the universe and ultimate masters of earth. russia pays you tribute with technology and all you have to do is offer them some worthless paper, they're so scared of you, everyone is scared of india.

He's not worth it buddy, it's clear his only purpose here is to flood the forum with anti-China posts. :azn:
 
Yeah , but by the same token you need to understand the rest of the world. In democracies they have plenty of people who don't fall for such govt puppeteers. Look at the worlds reaction to Bush/ Cheney as a classic example and the majority of American people's agreement with them. when Nigeria has that news that it indicted Cheney... we did not all band under the patriotism banner in the US, majority said jail him :).

as I said , with great power comes great responsibility on the world stage and China works in the reverse. you may get to be a great economic power, your certainly arrogant about your new found power ( developed countries have voiced that concern)-but you won't ever get to be super power w/ that attitude and respected on the world stage.

Like we need a proud citizen of a living hell-h... to lecture what China need to do eh? :azn:
Firstly, don't even talk about your so-called democracy as to put yourself in a high moral ground, India democracy+caste-system=castocracy.
Secondly, come back and talk to us when India stop being the laughing stock in the world like top the world hunger chart, not a 650 million toiletless nation, extreme poverty more than 26 african countries combine.:lol:
As for the time being, please keep your BS to yourself only, no one is interesting, OK?:no:
 
^^ He is an Indian origin American idiots. If you have to oppose him, make comments against America. Otherwise I would have to start bashing China.
 
^^ He is an Indian origin American idiots. If you have to oppose him, make comments against America. Otherwise I would have to start bashing China.

Give me a break, do you guys ever care about the location flag? everybody on this forum only take the flag on the left seriouly. If he is defending India, and you expecting some dual nationality privilege?:no:
Oh, you scare me, bring it on! see who will get the short end of the stick.:D
 
In China, internal affairs are the only thing that truly matters.

Plus, China isn't aiming to be a superpower anyway. See this quote from Deng Xiaoping:

"Keep a cool head and maintain a low profile. Never take the lead - but aim to do something big."

Deng is your philosophy, don't lead just copy paste and steal big. that line sounds like every mafioso's creed and we all know sooner or later it leads to their demise.

Here is India philosophy where deng helps- don't lead , let China and US fight it out , they will loose that fight like the old Soviet Union and collapse and let India slip into No2 position behind US : Yeah !!!!
 
Last edited:
When the CCP makes their emotions "public", it is almost always a very calculated decision. They may rage in private (like over North Korea), but to make it public, such a thing always comes with an underlying political motive.

The most important thing in China is the internal situation, that will always matter more than any external situation.

Liu Xiaobo was an excellent excuse, to unify the Chinese population under the banner of patriotism. And from what I can tell, it looks like it has worked. :azn: It has caused even the non-political Chinese people to defend their own government against external criticism.

NO ONE IS CRITICIZING THE CHINESE....the west has a problem in china because it represents something else...something very different from them......india doesnt have any problem with china as long as it stays off our backs and solves the only problem between us ...i.e boundary disputes.
CHEERS.:toast_sign:
 
The thread have some amazingly fuking tags,it read's-pakistan,Fashion and pretty:blink:
 
Bang Galore said:
Perhaps China should have done what Iran did, when the Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to the Iranian human rights campaigner Shirin Ebadi.

The government in Tehran complained loudly that it was being insulted and traduced, but when Ms Ebadi came to Oslo to pick up her prize, the Iranian ambassador was sitting there at the front of the audience, applauding.

That defused the entire public relations problem for Iran.


Later, in a police raid on some of her property, the golden Nobel medal was confiscated. But by then the fuss, and the international awareness, had long since died down.

This is brilliant!
 

Latest posts

Country Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom