[Deathwatch] Zhao Ziyang, former Communist Party leader, 85

Deathwatch Central cdw at slick.org
Mon Jan 17 09:46:24 PST 2005


Purged Chinese Communist Party leader Zhao Ziyang dies

BEIJING (AFP) - Former Communist Party leader Zhao Ziyang, who put
China on the road to economic reform but was purged for opposing the
bloody 1989 crackdown on the Tiananmen democracy movement, died aged 85
after nearly 16 years under house arrest.

Zhao had been seriously ill in a Beijing hospital for a month with a
lung problem and lapsed into a coma on Friday after suffering a stroke.
His death was confirmed in a short dispatch by China's official Xinhua
news agency.

"Comrade Zhao Ziyang died of illness in a Beijing hospital Monday,"
said Xinhua. State radio and television did not mention his death in
their evening prime time news broadcasts.

Zhao's daughter Wang Yannan sent a short text-message to friends by
mobile phone. "He left peacefully this morning, he is free at last,"
said the message.

Vice President Zeng Qinghong paid a pre-dawn visit to Zhao about an
hour before he died, the Hong Kong-based Information Center for Human
Rights and Democracy said, citing members of Zhao's family.

Zhao had served as communist party secretary general and prime minister
for much of the 1980s. But he was unceremoniously stripped of his party
post after he opposed using military force to end the six-week-long
student-led protests in Beijing's Tiananmen Square.

After his removal from power, Zhao lived under house arrest in a
tightly guarded compound in central Beijing.

Although the ruling party discredited his political reform plans, his
economic reforms in the 1980s set the stage for the opening up of
China's economy and 25 years of dramatic economic growth.

Zhao had been handpicked by then-patriarch Deng Xiaoping to become
prime minister in 1980 after turning around the disastrous Maoist
economic policies in the southwestern province of Sichuan.

He was seen as an efficient technocrat, a realist unburdened by
communist dogma.

Overseas leaders mourned his death, with Japanese Prime Minister
Junichiro Koizumi urging China to move forward with the political
reforms that Zhao had once envisioned.

"I want them to make efforts for democratization," Jiji Press news
agency quoted Koizumi as saying.

Portuguese President Jorge Sampaio, on a visit to the Chinese terrority
of Macau, offered his "deep condolences" and said Zhao was "noted for
his humanity and his moderation".

The government of arch-rival Taiwan urged China to reassess Zhao's role
during the 1989 crackdown.

"We urge Beijing to re-examine the history and honestly face the truth
at Tiananmen Square on June 4, 1989," cabinet spokesman Chen Chi-mai
said.

"We urge the Chinese government to learn from Mr. Zhao's tolerance, to
push for democratic and political reforms and respect the call for an
open and diverse society."

In Beijing, political dissidents also mourned Zhao.

	 

"Zhao Ziyang was a great and enlightened Chinese leader," veteran
dissident and democracy activist Ren Wanding told AFP.

"He opposed military violence to resolve the 1989 democracy protests. A
lot of Chinese leaders were unable to do this. This is where his
greatness lies."

Ren and other activists called for a public funeral.

"The Chinese government, at the very least, should have an open and
public funeral for Zhao Ziyang," said Jiang Peikun, whose 17-year-old
son was gunned down in the streets of Beijing during the 1989 protest.

Analysts have said the government would be concerned the death of Zhao
could become a rallying point for public disillusionment, especially
over the growing gap between rich and poor.

However, on Tiananmen Square and around Zhao's house in central Beijing
Monday, security appeared normal.

Zhao was last seen in public on May 19, 1989 with current Premier Wen
Jiabao when he visited Tiananmen Square and urged the students to
leave. The next day the government imposed martial law, leading to the
assault by troops on the night of June 3.

Hundreds, if not thousands, of unarmed citizens and protesters were
gunned down during the assault. The government, including Wen,
continues to maintain the crackdown was necessary to safeguard
political stability for ongoing economic reforms.

In a series of interviews conducted in the 1990s and recently published
in Hong Kong, Zhao blamed late paramount leader Deng for the fateful
events of Tiananmen and insisted he could have ended the protests
peacefully.

He was born in 1919 in central Henan province to a family of well-known
landowners. After the communists took power in 1949, he held a series
of senior positions in the southern provinces of Guangdong and Sichuan
before being summoned to Beijing. 


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