It is an anniversary that China wants to forget. Today marks 40 years since the start of the cultural revolution, one of the most insane episodes of the 20th century when children turned on parents, pupils tyrannised teachers and hundreds of thousands died in the name of class war.
The government will hold no commemoration. But for one survivor, at least, the lessons of those ”10 years of chaos” must be heeded if China is to develop a modern law-governed society to match its economic progress.
Zhang Sizhi — the country’s most eminent lawyer — knows the horrors of that period. When the cultural revolution was launched on May 16 1966, he was already interned as a condemned ”rightist” in a reform-through-labour camp. And after it ended with Mao Zedong’s death in 1976 he was chosen to defend the chief scapegoats — the ”Gang of Four” — in China’s trial of the century.
In only his second interview in the three decades since, Zhang told The Guardian that these experiences convinced him of the need for an independent legal system. Although President Hu Jintao says that China is moving towards rule by law, political interference in judicial decision-making is the norm at all levels. ”It is ridiculous that party cadres who have no legal qualification are taking the place of the courts in administering justice,” said Zhang. ”But in the current environment, it has become almost a rule of the game.”
The official history of that period records the May 16 circular in which Mao called for a life-or-death struggle against bourgeois ideology, saying: ”All erroneous ideas, all poisonous weeds, all ghosts and monsters, must be subjected to criticism.”
Textbooks recognise this was a mistake that led to political chaos, economic instability and social unrest as Red Guards publicly humiliated, and sometimes killed, professors, doctors and other ”counter-revolutionaries”.
But questions about responsibility and compensation remain largely unanswered. Although Mao drafted the circular, most of the blame for what followed is usually heaped upon the ”Gang of Four” led by Mao’s wife, Jiang Qing.
At their televised trial, the Gang of Four were accused of persecuting 700 000 people and held directly responsible for 35 000 deaths. Most foreign scholarship puts the killings at between 300 000 and 800 000. In their biography of Mao, Jung Chang and Jon Halliday estimate the toll at three-million.
The trial was billed as a resurrection of the rule of law, but it was anything but fair. Like the judge, Zhang was under orders about how to handle the case.
”The key point was not to mention Mao in the courtroom,” he recalled. ”It is still very sensitive to talk about Mao’s mistakes.” His client had no such qualms. Jiang testified that she was ”Mao’s dog” who only bit on his orders. Such comments were censored from the televised highlights. The judge acknowledged Mao was partially responsible, but his comments were removed from the trial summary in the Chinese media. The four were convicted. Jiang killed herself in jail in 1991.
Zhang says political interference is still the legal system’s biggest problem. In Beijing the mayor or the secretary general of the Communist party often give detailed orders to judges. In big trials it comes in the form of written guidance. But instructions are also made by phone or face-to-face, which means no one can be held accountable.
International human rights groups say China executes 4 000 to 10 000 people every year. ”Sometimes people are given the death penalty without serious consideration of their crimes,” says Zhang, who favours reducing the number of crimes punishable by death.
Asked whether he had ever won a politically sensitive case in his 50 years as a defence lawyer, Zhang paused, then replied. ”No, not one.” But he had not given up. ”The court’s verdict is not the final result. History will be the judge.”
Zhang keeps pushing for legal reform. ”Lawyers should be practical as well as idealistic, but everyone should do their best to increase the independence of the legal system. No one can stop the big international trend and that trend is democracy.”
This year he was among a group of retired senior cadres who wrote an open letter attacking the propaganda department and calling for an end to censorship. Part of their motivation is to avoid a repeat of the past.
”Relationships changed as a result of the cultural revolution. The morality level of our country declined. If you want to talk about mistakes made by Mao, this was one of them,” said Zhang, before pausing again. ”I am too frank. that is why I usually deny interviews.”
Is it not better that such things are in the open? ”Yes, this should be talked about. But nowadays, it is not easy to tell the truth.”
That is not the only reason why he thinks there is never likely to be justice for victims of the cultural revolution. ”There are so many perpetrators it will never be possible to track them down. How can compensation be paid? So many bad things happened.”
Turbulent decade
- Mao Zedong launched the cultural revolution in 1966 by calling for a life-or-death struggle against bourgeois ideology. It allowed him to reassert authority over rivals who criticised his handling of the economy
- Student Red Guards, who worshipped Mao, led the persecution of ”class enemies”. They were urged on by the ultra-leftist ”Gang of Four”
- Thousands died in battles between political factions or killed themselves after public humiliations. The best known victim was Lin Biao, the head of the army, who died in a plane crash after an attempted coup in 1971
- Ancient treasures and temples were destroyed after Mao called for the eradication of feudal values. The turmoil ended with his death in 1976
– Guardian Unlimited Â