By Austin Ramzy of Time Magazine:
The struggle for democracy against tyranny is not the focus of China’s news coverage of Egypt’s turmoil. Instead, much of the state-run media is devoting itself to the story of how the Chinese government arranged for eight flights last week to take home 1,848 stranded citizens. One returning traveler, upon receiving a bouquet of flowers in the Beijing airport, declared, “Thank the motherland!” according to a Xinhua story.
The stranded-tourists story certainly jibes with traditional coverage of the Chinese New Year festival, the time when some 230 million Chinese have to make their way home to celebrate the holidays with their families. And as scenes of chaos and violence emerge from Cairo, the image of a safe, caring China is precisely the soothing message the government wants to send to its citizens. China, after all, has had its share of democracy uprisings, most notably the Tiananmen demonstrations of 1989 in which hundreds were killed in the crackdown by the People’s Liberation Army. Those protests had begun during a time of political upheaval in far-off Eastern Europe, and Chinese authorities remain wary of events abroad influencing politics at home. (Watch a video about the use of social media in Egypt.)
The state-controlled media’s coverage of the revolutions in Georgia, Ukraine and Kyrgyzstan in 2003-05 emphasized the tension and uncertainty of those movements, a pattern that continues in the official reporting on uprisings in Tunisia and Egypt. On Feb. 4, after government backers clashed with protesters in Cairo, Xinhua reported that the presence of opposing protest groups was “causing grave conflicts.” On Sunday, the cover image of the Beijing Times was a huge fireball that erupted at a terminal on the Sinai Peninsula. The story emphasized early reports that the blast was caused by sabotage. “When you read most Western news sources, there’s an emphasis on the unhappiness of the people, corruption of the government, the political paralysis in Egypt causing people not to have an outlet,” says Jeremy Goldkorn, founder and editor of Danwei.org, a website about media and the Internet in China. “In China, it’s much more that there are people demonstrating against government, chaos on streets, the banks are shut down, the army is on street.”
Read full article at Time Magazine.
In discussing the Middle East, we might benefit from Anthony Wile¡¯s discussion on The Daily Bell concerning how pricing oil in dollars and thus supporting the dollar as the world¡¯s reserve currency might have as much to do with America¡¯s many invasions of the region as well as our support of corrupt authoritarian regimes at Mid-East Conflict Not Exactly About Oil at
http://www.thedailybell.com/1851/Anthony-Wile-Mid-East-Conflict-Not-Exactly-About-Oil.html
Also this article on the dangers to the region of copying the failing American regulatory democracy model titled A Middle East Warning: American-Style Democracy Isn¡¯t the Answer is also a worthwhile read as he recommends the Swiss model of government as an alternative at
http://www.lewrockwell.com/holland/holland43.1.html
Thanks,
Douglas