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Enforced silence at China's Cultural Revolution museum
by Staff Writers
Shantou, China (AFP) Aug 15, 2014


China 'firmly opposes' Japan Yasukuni tributes: govt
Beijing (AFP) Aug 15, 2014 - China is "firmly opposed" to the Japanese government's "wrongful attitude towards historical issues", the foreign ministry said Friday after two cabinet ministers visited a controversial war shrine and Prime Minister Shinzo Abe made an "offering".

The Yasukuni shrine "is a place that honours Class-A war criminals of World War II and whitewashes Japan's war of aggression", spokeswoman Hua Chunying said in a statement on the ministry website.

Friday is the anniversary of the Japanese surrender announcement that brought World War II to an end.

Chinese researchers say that the conflict, and the preceding invasion and partial occupation of China, cost the country 20.6 million lives, straining relations between the Asian powers to this day.

"The core of all the issues surrounding the Yasukuni Shrine is whether the Japanese government can own up to and adopt a correct attitude towards its history of aggression," Hua said.

China fails to receive Papal message after technical glitch
Seoul (AFP) Aug 15, 2014 - China's leadership failed to receive an unprecedented message of goodwill sent by Pope Francis as he flew over the country, Vatican officials admitted Friday, blaming technical problems for the mishap at a delicate moment in relations with Beijing.

The pope offering his blessings in a message to China's President Xi Xinping on Thursday, taking advantage of protocol that sees him send a note to nations' leaders as he travels through their airspace.

But the message never arrived, the pope's spokesman Federico Lombardi said, leaving China's embassy in Rome in the position of having to request the pontiff's words be retransmitted.

"We didn't know if the message had been received," said Lombardi. "The Chinese embassy in Rome asked for information about the message because it seemed not to have arrived."

The glitch is especially unfortunate timing as the pope was en route to South Korea for a visit squarely aimed at fuelling a new era of growth for the Catholic church in Asia, while China continues a long-running battle with the Vatican for control of its Catholic community.

It was the first time that the pope had been permitted to fly over China, with the world's media giving extra scrutiny to the papal dispatch, which invoked "the divine blessings of peace and wellbeing on the nation."

His words were later resent via the Italian embassy, as Beijing and the Holy See have no formal diplomatic relations.

When Pope John Paul II visited South Korea in 1989, Beijing refused to let his plane fly over China.

Although the Church is making some spectacular gains in Asia, Catholics still only account for 3.2 percent of the continent's population.

But expansion faces tough challenges, especially in China which prohibits its Catholics from recognising the Vatican's authority.

According to various reports, scores of Chinese Catholics were prevented from travelling to South Korea for Asian Youth Day, and Beijing also warned Chinese priests in attendance not to participate in any event involving the pope.

No signs along the long and dusty mountain road point the way to the Cultural Revolution museum complex.

And this year, no commemoration for the millions of victims of Mao Zedong's mayhem was held on the anniversary of its start.

The mountaintop museum on the outskirts of Shantou chronicles an uncomfortable chapter of history that China's ruling Communist Party would rather forget.

Neighbour was pitted against neighbour, child against parent, and the Red Guard student movement was tasked with purging ideological "foes", often bloodily, as Mao forcefully reasserted his power over the party and the country following the disaster of his Great Leap Forward and the subsequent famine.

"We came to this Cultural Revolution museum to cherish the memory of the victims, our compatriots," said Liu Jingyi, 41, a business owner who brought his son and daughter.

"I talk to my children about the events of the past, and I tell them that in the future, they must conduct themselves with integrity and be upright, honest people," he said.

The Communist Party officially declared Mao "70 percent right and 30 percent wrong", and has said the Cultural Revolution dealt China "the most severe setback and the heaviest losses" since the foundation of the People's Republic in 1949.

But it has never allowed a full reckoning of the turmoil that took place between 1966 and 1976.

"I feel quite ignorant about history. I came here to try to understand things better," said a lone 20-year-old student surnamed Chen, perusing inscriptions of hundreds of crimes from the era: "Capitalism". "False Marxism". "False leftist, true rightist".

The main exhibition hall contains a day-by-day account of the decade of violence and ideological frenzy, alongside hundreds of images of Mao and other party leaders, public shamings, beatings and killings.

Two vast red columns proclaim: "On heaven and earth, this calamitous history exists here alone. In all the world, what's most important is the ability to judge right from wrong."

- 'Dead souls' -

The privately funded museum was founded -- with neither support nor outright opposition from Communist authorities -- by Peng Qi'an, the former deputy mayor of Shantou, on China's southern coast.

Peng's brother, a teacher, was beaten to death and Peng, now 83, listed for execution. It was never carried out, for reasons unknown.

The sprawling complex includes long black walls bearing the names of several thousand victims, and since 2006 hundreds of their relatives have gathered every August 8, the anniversary of the Communist Party Central Committee's decision to launch the Cultural Revolution.

China's official Xinhua news agency previewed last year's ceremony and quoted Peng saying: "I promised the dead souls we would mourn them on this particular date every year, even if I have to climb up the mountain to their graves in a wheelchair."

But this month's event was called off at the last minute, apparently under pressure from the authorities. Shantou officials could not be reached for comment, but Peng stayed away from the museum, and declined to be interviewed for this article.

Under President Xi Jinping -- whose chosen themes of anti-corruption and frugality echo some of Mao's edicts -- China has tightened its limits on freedom of expression, jailing human rights lawyers, journalists and activists.

In recent months official media have publicised the confessions of several former Red Guards, including Song Binbin, a powerful general's daughter who participated in one of the first and most notorious killings of a teacher.

But such candour has strict limits.

The ruling party has allowed general criticism of the Cultural Revolution "because that's the official stance", said Barry Sautman, a professor of social science at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology.

Any discussion that touched the roles of specific leaders "would be a big problem", he said.

"Politicians do what they do best, which is exercise power. If it's to protect themselves, they'll be sure to do so."

More than 70 local residents killed during the Cultural Revolution are buried near the museum, thousands of others were persecuted, and many more are still haunted by the events of the time.

On the morning of the anniversary a few visitors defied the cancellation to attend.

A 72-year-old retiree, who declined to give his name for fear of retribution, said that in pre-Communist China his grandfather had been involved in legal proceedings that saw several people in Shantou executed.

During the Cultural Revolution, "the responsibility for this was placed on the head of my father" and he was killed, he said, determined to speak out but his quiet tone revealing his anxiety.

The family were declared "landowners" -- the worst of the Communist Party's "five black categories" of enemies.

"China today is still very factionalised," he went on, tears welling in his eyes. "Some things are still not very clear. I worry that I might be harmed once again."

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