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SEPTEMBER 27, 1999 VOL. 154 NO. 12
Unfortunately, China's leaders insist on following the Maoist principle of putting politics in command, in an effort to show the rest of the world that the Chinese people can accomplish anything. By blindly giving priority to economic development, they are following the naive belief that man can simply triumph over nature even while making endless demands on it. In fact, a nation with dignity and self-confidence doesn't need to show off or flaunt its superiority. Only those who think deeply, plan carefully, act moderately and make the best use of their available resources can be called people of the new century. In the late 1950s, Chairman Mao had to consider whether to divide the nation's wealth among the common people so as to lift them from poverty, or to focus resources on huge infrastructure projects that might earn China international respect. Mao decided in favor of state-planned projects and blocked all contrary opinions. Under President Jiang Zemin's rule, the Chinese people are no longer willing to sacrifice their own interests to improve the nation's strength. And there will never again be a Big Brother to suppress the people if they start to assert their own interests and resist authorities. It is too bad that such a project was not undertaken at the right time. If such a dam was built during Sun Yat-sen's era, it would surely have attracted the world's attention. If it was built during Mao's time, it would have lifted the morale of the Chinese people as they tried to overcome the "imperialist" blockade. If it was completed in the '80s when Deng Xiaoping was pioneering reforms, it could have boosted the economy and attracted worthwhile loans and aid from foreign governments and multinational banks. Unfortunately, the Three Gorges Dam has only now entered its second phase, with a decade of construction still to go. Meanwhile the numbers of people--inside and outside China--who oppose the project are growing far faster than those who stand to benefit by gaining power, profit and prestige. Many of us wonder if the authorities will float a model of the Three Gorges Dam during the parade on Oct. 1 marking the People's Republic's 50th anniversary. It would send the wrong message. For the Chinese, the dam stands not for pride in the motherland but for deep worries about the soon-to-be-silted-up Yangtze and about the people who will have to be resettled. As for our leaders, though they dress in Western-style clothing, these fourth generation party headmen have not moved forward in their thinking, knowledge or style--including how to treat their citizens. The way they have mistreated the millions who live along the Yangtze River is the most tragic proof of their outdated mode of thinking. Dai Qing is the author of Yangtze! Yangtze!, a collection of essays on the Three Gorges project ALSO SEE: WUHAN: Swimming the Yangtze SHIYAN: Hidden Factories TIME Asia home | |||||||||||||||||
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