Splittism Is The Nightmare Of The Red Emperor
Splittism Is The Nightmare of the Red Emperor
Splittism is a term
used by President Xi Jinping. Most recently, he applied it to Tibet, pointing
at its religious, political and cultural dissidence. His ire is directed at the
glue of Buddhism there. He has vowed to turn Tibet into a Han fortress.
Of late, the off-balance
“Red Emperor”, plagued by many devils, deals mostly in threats and insults. His
“Might is Right” playbook is being roundly challenged everywhere, and he has
been reacting boorishly.
The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and the
Peoples Liberation Army (PLA) has not been able to stamp out the spirit of
Tibetan freedom in all the time since it was overrun in 1950. This despite the
Tibetans being more or less unarmed.
Perhaps the need for a
fresh bout of repression has become urgent now because of unexpected Indian resistance.
India now refuses to cede any more surreptitiously grabbed territory, and has
demonstrated some intent to get back a lot of it lost to China since 1962.
India has pointedly spearheaded
its military tactics along with a Tibetan commando force made up from Tibetan
exiles. A Tibetan government in exile also watches and waits in India along
with the ousted Dalai Lama.
Recently a Buddhist
monastery was demolished in Eastern Tibet. Earlier, Tibetan Prayer Flags were
routinely pulled down. Monks have been roughed up and sometimes killed. Tibetans
have been urged to be grateful for the benefits of development brought by China.
They are expected to integrate with the Han majority.
Xi Jinping likes to
trample on cultural, political and religious identity. And not just those of
the Buddhists, Christians and Muslims located in China. He expects to break
resistance this way. Recently he aimed some of his venom at India too.
Shortly after India upgraded
a road to the LaC to make it easier for Hindu pilgrims to visit Kailash
Mansarovar and Kailash Parbat, China chose to site missiles and a military base
at the foot of Mount Kailash. A place regarded by Hindus as the sacred abode of
Lord Shiva.
Splittism is now plaguing
a faltering China on every side. President Xi Jinping is fighting multiple
challenges to his sway in the CCP. One powerful challenger in the heart of the
CCP, is Premier Li Keqiang. Increasing information flow has blown the lid off
the power struggle. There have been a series of leaks to the media on different
aspects of the ravaged Chinese economy, normally kept well hidden from the
world. Li Keqiang has been raising concerns about the plight of millions of the
Chinese poor, with suggestions, facts and figures. Bad Debt laden Chinese banks
are struggling to survive. Factories are closed. There are publicly
acknowledged food shortages. Floods, pestilence, the recent pandemic from Wuhan,
have all taken their toll.
Retired military brass have
also weighed in. One of them, an Airforce retired Major General Qiao Liang, in
his book called Unrestricted Warfare first suggested the development of a deadly
virus that is then exported to the world. President Xi seems to have
implemented this idea, with disastrous consequences not only for the world, but
China itself.
But lately, the retired
generals, Liang and Dai Xu in particular, want Xi to change course. They want
him to stop the aggression on the borders with India, against Taiwan and other
targets. They feel China is stretching military resources too thin by opening
so many fronts simultaneously. It is also unifying the opposition to China.
But a roll-back would
mean loss of face for Xi Jinping. He seems unwilling to show weakness though he
seems frustrated enough. But others, such as the Defence Minister and the
Foreign Minister seem highly stressed.
In counterpoint to all
the splittism, Xi Jinping has ramped up his favourite weapon of an
anti-corruption drive. This campaign, a favourite device, tends to wax and wane.
It is a thinly veiled purging mechanism. It gets rid of Communist functionaries
that are opposed to Xi in the name of action against corruption. Dozens have
been removed from office, particularly in troubled Xinjiang.. The other side of
the coin has Xi Jinping and his family, along with others close to him, involved
in massive accumulation of offshore wealth. As much as $ 4 trillion has allegedly found
its way out of China and into secret accounts abroad.
On splittism there is
no mercy. Christian churches are demolished and Bibles burnt. Inner Mongolians
are told to forget their native tongue and learn Mandarin. Uighurs in Xinjiang
are put in detention camps for re-education. Mosques are razed and Korans
shredded. Beards are banned, along with Muslim worship. Han minders are sent to
cohabit with Uighur women while their men are being re-educated.
In Hong Kong the protests are much more
visible to the outside world. Xi Jinping sees them as unpatriotic and infected
by British taught democratic aspirations. The crackdown there is equally brutal
even as other countries pile up the economic boycotts and sanctions on China.
Military posturing to
conquer Taiwan and occupy the South China Sea have brought the United States
military into the arena. The East China Sea is being patrolled by Japan. Other
navies and airforces - Australian, Indian, French, Russian, are watching the
Indian Ocean, the Malacca Straits, the South China Sea, and everywhere else
there is a Chinese presence.
The spectre of splittism
haunts all dictatorships of the Left and Right. However, it is the only perceived remedy to
the extreme concentration of power. Apart, that is, from regime change. Stalin
must have had his own one word Cossack moniker for the phenomenon. It has
always brought on humungous purges and drawn torrents of blood. But it is a recurring
suspicion, and doesn’t quite feel assuaged no matter how many, or how hard, it
strikes.
It even finds prominence in democracies, in
those pockets that are electorally captured by despotic political parties and ruled
by a single person and his or her family. Sometimes this lack of inner party
democracy leads to change, just as in a dictatorship.
In the beleaguered
Indian State of West Bengal, for a half century under the lash of Communist and
populist but parochial, chauvinist rule already, splittism has surfaced. It is
not enough to call it anti-incumbency, because the ruling Trinamool Congress is
now being ripped apart from within. This is very significant, given that it
sends 42 members to parliament, and West Bengal has a 294 member assembly.
Political strategist Prashant
Kishor and his firm Indian Political Action Committee (I-PAC), has found
trouble brewing. The assessment was done between March and August 2020, even as
the Covid 19 pandemic rages on. This year, Cylone Amphan has also devastated
Kolkata and parts of West Bengal.
I-PAC conducted three
separate surveys, a month apart, across the 294 Assembly constituencies in the
state. What was looking like 110 sure seats in TMC’s kitty in March, plummeted
to 78 in August. In 2016, TMC won 211 seats. The one past the half-way mark in
the West Bengal Assembly is 148.
I-PAC and Prashant
Kishor have made battle plans to remedy the situation before the elections scheduled
of April-May 2021. But can it stem the rot?
Is this unhappiness in
constituencies over the handling of Covid-19 and the cyclone? Or, has it come
about gradually, only catalysed by
recent events? Is it weariness over the corruption, anarchy, high-handedness,
lawlessness? The TMC cannot tolerate
criticism from anyone in the Party, or indeed within the state. The
Centre is demonised, defied, and projected as the predatory “outsider”. A sense
of localised victimhood is encouraged.
Once more, the prospect
of the fall, if it comes, will be engineered as much from within the TMC, as
without, by the opposition BJP.
There are other spectacles
of splittism. One playing out, is at the heart of the Congress Party.
Splittism is almost
always brought on by a slippage in the power equation. That it should happen in
an absence of political power is almost inevitable. But while a government is
still in the saddle, splittism owes its onset to growing deficits and
contradictions that cannot be quelled by sheer repression. An inner coterie can
no longer control the tides of dissent. Sometimes it is a consequence of biting
off more than one can chew. But this is seen only by others. It all takes some
time to play out. But splittism
invariably portends the beginning of the end.
(1,398 words)
September 10th, 2020
For: The Sunday Guardian
Gautam Mukherjee
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