A city in southwest China has ordered state radio and television to promote the mass study of “red songs,” which sing the praises of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), official press reported yesterday.
Authorities in Chongqing, one of four cities on a political par with Chinese provinces, aim to set up a chorus of praise for the party ahead of the 90th anniversary of its founding on July 1, the Chongqing Daily reported.
“Each district, each government department and every enterprise must fully bring into play the special functions of this campaign to get the Chongqing masses to sing red songs,” the paper said.
“We must use every means to earnestly organize singing lessons for all cadres and people in order to enrich the masses with spiritual culture,” the paper said.
The campaign comes after Chongqing party secretary Bo Xilai (薄熙來), son of the late CCP revolutionary Bo Yibo (薄一波), pledged to reinvigorate the city with the Marxist ideals of his father’s comrade-in-arms, Mao Zedong (毛澤東).
The image of the huge and fast-growing city of more than 30 million people was sullied by a police crackdown in 2009 that exposed a thriving and rapacious criminal underworld acting with impunity.
During the “red song” campaign, Chongqing residents are being urged to download 36 tunes from state television Web sites, while daily newspapers will print a song in each of their editions, the report said.
Chongqing television and radio stations will also play the songs throughout the day, it said.
The campaign is the latest in a “red” push in Chongqing. State-run Chongqing Satellite Television in January set aside popular television shows in favor of programming extolling communist ideals.
The switch was aimed at “restoring fading red morals” with shows that will “reflect mainstream social values,” the report said.
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