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文章标题: China's Crisis Has A Political Edge(zt) (227 reads)      时间: 2003-4-27 周日, 下午4:44

作者:Anonymous罕见奇谈 发贴, 来自 http://www.hjclub.org



Leaders Use SARS to Challenge Recalcitrant Parts of Government



By John Pomfret

Washington Post Foreign Service

Sunday, April 27, 2003; Page A33

BEIJING, April 26 -- On April 7, China's premier, Wen Jiabao, visited the

country's Center for Disease Control. The assessment of his visit by the

state-run news media was upbeat.

Wen "stressed that China has the SARS epidemic under control," the state

media reported.

But what the premier really said was something different.

"He talked about the military," a person present during the visit said.

"He said it was wrong that the military was not reporting cases of SARS.

He said we have to start telling the truth to the people. He asked us how

many people had SARS in Beijing. We couldn't tell him."

Within days of his visit, Wen had formed a team of officials led by an ally,

Deputy Health Minister Gao Qiang. The team's task, Gao said later, was to

meet with officials in the Beijing municipal government and go directly

to civilian hospitals to find out the number of SARS cases in Beijing.

At the time, Western news media were aggressively reporting on SARS and

on a coverup of the number of cases in Beijing . The reports were translated

and sent out over the Internet and through short-text messaging services

to mobile phones across the capital.

The quick explosion of information that hit Beijing and other parts of China

created the most significant challenge for China's new government and its

political system in more than a decade. But it also created an opportunity

for Wen and China's new president, Hu Jintao, who came to power on March

19. The two leaders have used the crisis to challenge the authority of parts

of China's government, the military and the capital city's administration,

ultimately challenging the authority of their predecessor, former president

Jiang Zemin.

Another problem involved getting the military in Beijing to cooperate, officials

said. SARS first spread to Beijing at the army's Hospital No. 301 and moved

rapidly to hospitals No. 302 and No. 309. But no one in the military reported

these numbers to civilian authorities in the city.

For weeks, while the epidemic raged in Beijing, city authorities kept information

about its scope from the central government, sources said. "It was as if

an epidemic raged in Washington but was kept secret from the White House,"

said a Western ambassador. Henk Bekedam, the head of the World Health Organization

office in Beijing, agreed. "The center really did not know," he said.

Beijing city officials had many allies in the central government willing

to keep the news from Wen and Hu. For example, Jia Qinglin, former Beijing

party secretary, is on the nine-member Standing Committee of the Politburo.

Liu Qi, the current party secretary in Beijing, is on the Politburo.

"These men knew the extent of the problem, but they have a lot to lose,

so they suppressed information," a Chinese government source said.

Health Minister Zhang Wenkang also was aware of what was happening in the

city.

On March 27, Bi Shengli, a leading virologist in Beijing, warned a senior

official who works in Zhang's office.

"We have disaster in the capital in this new disease," Bi said. "We have

got to do something."

Bi's interlocutor told him that the minister already knew about the problem

but, Bi recalled, "he said, 'We have to negotiate with other ministries

and government departments before anything could be done.' Well, nothing

was done."

"Beijing told the center, 'No problem.' Beijing said, 'We can handle it.

It's a piece of cake,' " Bi said. "The next day doctors and nurses were

pushed down by the disease."

Central government officials said they received more cooperation from the

province of Guangdong, which for decades has had a reputation for unruliness,

than from Beijing. SARS is believed to have originated in the province

in November.

Guangdong officials invited three delegations from the national Center for

Disease Control to the province to look into the SARS outbreak starting

in early February, CDC officials said. Beijing has never allowed the central

CDC to look into the SARS situation, sources said.

"Guangdong respects the center more than Beijing," said a health official.

"Beijing ignores the center."

Around the time Wen visited China's CDC, Jiang Yanyong, the former director

of Hospital No. 301 and a retired surgeon, wrote an open letter accusing

the government of a coverup. He said military hospitals that he had contacted

had more than 100 SARS patients, although Beijing officials were reporting

only a few dozen cases.

The chief of the CDC, Li Liming, seconded the surgeon's criticism, telling

the premier that "if we had controlled the military hospitals at the beginning,

we never would have had this epidemic in Beijing," a witness said.

President Hu, using his position as vice chairman of the Central Military

Commission, persuaded the army to release statistics of SARS patients in

its hospitals.

On April 20, Gao released his preliminary results. Beijing had 346 patients

infected with SARS, almost 10 times the number the ministry had previously

acknowledged. The numbers have since risen to 988 infected and 48 dead.

That same day, the health minister, Zhang, lost his job. He was replaced

today by Vice Premier Wu Yi, the highest-ranking woman in China's government.

In what was described as a "fair trade" by a Chinese government official,

Meng Xuenong, the mayor of Beijing and an ally of Hu, was also forced to

step down.

The pressure on the military will ultimately force Hu and Wen to confront

former president Jiang, government sources said. Although he stepped down

as president in March, Jiang remained as chief of the Central Military Commission.



Until today, Jiang had remained silent on the epidemic. In a meeting in

Shanghai with India's defense minister, George Fernandes, Jiang said that

China had "scored notable achievements in containing the disease."

[China on Sunday ordered the closure of all of Beijing's theaters, cinemas,

Internet cafes and other public entertainment venues in an attempt to curb

of spread of SARS, the New China News Agency reported. The length of the

closures would depend on progress made in combating the virus, the agency

reported.]

Bi, the virologist, worries that despite the new commitment to truthful

reporting, Beijing is still slow to give accurate assessments.

"Once Guangdong realized they had a problem, they began to take bold action,"

he said. "Guangdong moved quickly to tell its people how to protect themselves

from SARS. It also gave money to its local CDC quickly and directly. But

Beijing is very slow."

"We have billions and billions from the center, but I don't know what time

that money will arrive at my lab," he said.

Bi and other experts have said that Beijing officials did not take adequate

measures last week to stop Beijing's huge migrant labor population from

returning home, and thereby possibly spreading the disease across China.

"The government held meetings for hours with no decision and meanwhile,

everybody left town," Bi said. "Beijing is the second peak of the disease.

The third one, in the countryside, will be much, much higher."







作者:Anonymous罕见奇谈 发贴, 来自 http://www.hjclub.org
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