A collection of documents from Zhao Ziyang (趙紫楊), who was the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) reformist leader until he was toppled in 1989 for opposing the Tiananmen crackdown, has been smuggled out of the country and published in Hong Kong this month, according to a publishing house that has turned them into a book.
The Collected Works of Zhao Ziyang, published by the Chinese University of Hong Kong Press, lifts the veil on behind-the-scenes wrangling among top leaders from 1980 to 1989, said Gan Qi (甘琦), director of the publisher.
“The information in these documents provides concrete first-hand evidence of the existence of such conflicts,” Gan said in an interview.
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It is unclear if the documents still come under China’s state secret laws. If they are classified it could provide a test of Beijing’s commitment to academic and publication freedom in the former British colony, which was rocked recently by allegations that China had abducted and illegally detained five men connected with a publishing house and bookstore.
The Chinese State Council Information Office did not respond to requests for comment.
The CCP History Research Office, reached by telephone, declined to comment.
Zhao, who was premier from 1980 to 1987 and became general secretary of the Chinese Communist Party in 1987, engaged in a dialogue with student groups leading the Tiananmen Square protests and even went to the square in central Beijing to appeal for them to end a hunger strike in May 1989, about two weeks before the crackdown.
Zhao, who died in 2005 after spending more than 15 years under house arrest for opposing the crackdown on June 4, 1989, remains a symbol of reformist rectitude to more liberal elements in the party.
His plain-speaking reformist stance is indicated in some of the documents.
For example, in a transcript of a closed-door party meeting in February 1987, Zhao said on the question of political reform that “past elections were elections without choices and it would be difficult to call them real democracy.”
In the transcript of a speech in April 1981, he says that it is best to “use scientific methods” and not to engage in political movements.
Gan declined to say how the documents, which reporters have seen in manuscript form, were smuggled out of China. She declined to identify the sources of the documents, other than to say they included Zhao’s former aides.
She said that experts were brought in to authenticate the documents, including Zhao’s handwriting, and that they passed a review by a committee of academics.
Asked if they involved state secrets, Gan said: “What an academic publishing institution can and should do is abide by local laws and publication process.”
The four-volume collection contains 498 mostly previously unpublished documents, including party and government reports, speeches, discussion transcripts, letters and handwritten instructions by Zhao when he served as premier and party chief, Gan said.
It does not include official documents about the 1989 protests.
China has never released a death toll from the crackdown, in which troops cleared demonstrators from central Beijing. Estimates from human rights groups and witnesses range from several hundred to several thousand.
It is not the first time, Zhao’s views have come back to haunt the Chinese leadership.
In May 2009, his memoirs Prisoner of the State, which had been secretly recorded under house arrest and smuggled out of the country, were published by Simon & Schuster.
Based on 30 hours of tape transcribed and translated into English, they included Zhao’s denunciation of the crackdown from the grave.
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