[liberationtech] China Jasmine Revolution
Yosem Companys
companys at stanford.edu
Sun Feb 20 00:58:41 PST 2011
The Revolution That Wasn’t
February 20, 2011
By C. Custer <http://chinageeks.org/author/custerc/>
http://chinageeks.org/2011/02/the-revolution-that-wasnt/
<http://chinageeks.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/copsarrive.jpg>Late last
night, I noticed that calls for large protests in several major Chinese
cities were circulating on Twitter. Using the hashtag #cn220, users were
reposting information from the overseas Chinese website Boxun, where an
anonymous user had called for a Chinese “Jasmine Revolution.” This morning,
those reports were mixed with reports that police and the military had
already begun to form up in the locations designated for protest around the
country. Naturally, I decided it would be a good idea to grab a camera and
head to the Wangfujing area, where Beijing’s protest was supposed to happen.
I should note that I didn’t actually expect to find much. This news was
being passed around almost exclusively on websites blocked in China, and
many of the people making tweets seemed to be making them from outside
China. There were people announcing that China’s jasmine revolution had
begun at 11 in the morning, three hours before the protests were even
supposed to start. But very few Chinese people had even heard about it, and
many of the Chinese twitter users I follow said they had already been
threatened, detained, or otherwise instructed not to go by police or Party
authorities.
<http://chinageeks.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/protest1.jpg>When we
arrived, around 1:40, there was already a small group of people clustered
around the entrance to McDonalds, the area designated online as the center
of the protest. Most of them were carrying expensive photo or video cameras,
and it was clear that a good percentage of the crowd was journalists.
I met up with a couple foreign correspondents I happen to know who had
arrived slightly before me. We joked for a little whole about the
“revolutionary” atmosphere, or lack thereof, and the ridiculousness of the
growing crowd of people, photographing itself. Of course, we were also
participants.
<http://chinageeks.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/bigcrowd.jpg>A little
after 2pm, the crowd reached its largest, perhaps two or three hundred
people, although there were people coming and leaving all the time because
Wangfujing is naturally a fairly busy place. Aside from one moment, where we
could see a bouquet of flowers fly above the heads of the center of the
crowd–perhaps they were jasmine flowers?–I saw nothing at any point that
could be considered protesting. No one shouted slogans, no one held signs,
it was just a group of people standing around photographing each other.
Of course, the crowd drew an increasingly heavy police presence, and they
herded people around the area for more than an hour before managing to more
or less clear the place out. At one point, they drove everyone from in front
of the McDonalds, so the crowd moved along the building’s side, blocking the
road there, at which point the police herded everyone back in front of the
McDonalds.
<http://chinageeks.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/morecops.jpg>For the most
part, the police showed surprising restraint, at least for Chinese cops. I
saw no incidents of violence, although I did overhear an argument between a
citizen and a police officer who had confiscated the man’s cell phone, and I
did personally get into a shouting match with a police officer who shoved
me. There were other reports of roughhousing, but nothing more than a bit of
shoving and pushing.
After an hour or so, we left. There were still some people hanging around,
but it was clear that everyone was waiting to see what would happen and no
one was going to actually do anything. Even the police were getting bored.
As we left, we passed a large group of them and overheard their commander
say “Back to normal!” As we walked down the stairs and into the subway
station, they piled into their vans and began to drive away.
<http://chinageeks.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/crowd1.jpg>It’s clear that
if change will come to China, it will come from within. A revolution cannot
be hoped or tweeted into existence by overseas Chinese, or overzealous
Twitter fans drunk off their so-called victories in North Africa.
As a side note, I continue to marvel at the Beijing police’s ability to take
nothing and turn it into an incident. Had they not come out in such large
numbers and not tried to force people to leave, I suspect this would have
been an even smaller “protest”.
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://mailman.stanford.edu/pipermail/liberationtech/attachments/20110220/a6fcb60a/attachment.html>
More information about the liberationtech
mailing list