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Grandstands are rising around
Washington, DC. The U.S. is
preparing for the Inauguration of a
new President whose campaign
mobilized a record number of
citizens and focused on themes of
hope and change.
Half way around the globe in the
world¨s most populous country, a
relatively small group of citizens
are proposing radical change for
their nation, change which reflects
in large part the ideals upon which
the United States was founded.
However, the proponents of this
change have been interrogated and
arrested.
On December 10, the 60th Anniversary
of the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights, 300 leading mainland
Chinese citizens!writers,
economists, political scientists,
retired party officials, former
newspaper editors, members of the
legal profession and human rights
defenders--issued Charter 08.
Charter 08 sets out a vision for a
democratic China based on the
citizen not the party, with a
government founded on human rights,
democracy, and rule of law. Charter
08 doesn¨t offer reform of the
current political system so much as
an end to features like one-party
rule. Since its release, more than
5000 citizens across China have
added their names to Charter 08.
Before the document was even
published, the Chinese authorities
detained two of the leading authors
Liu Xiaobo and Zhang Zuhua and have
since interrogated dozens of others
who signed. Most have been released
though they continue to be watched.
However, Liu Xiaobo, a major writer
and former president of the
Independent Chinese PEN Center,
remains in custody with no word of
his whereabouts and fears that he
will be charged with ^serious crimes
against the basic principles of the
Republic. ̄ The Chinese government
has also blocked or deleted websites
and blogs that carry Charter 08.
Charter 08 was inspired by a similar
action during the height of the
Soviet Union when writers and
intellectuals in Czechoslovakia
issued Charter 77 in January, 1977.
Charter 77 called for protection of
basic civil and political rights by
the state. Among the signatories was
Vaclav Havel, who was imprisoned for
his involvement but went on to
become the President of the Czech
Republic after the Soviet Union
ended.
Citizens around the globe, including
Vaclav Havel, Nobel laureates, human
rights defenders, writers,
economists, lawyers, academics, have
rallied in support of those who
signed Charter 08. The European
Union has expressed grave concern at
the arrest of Liu Xiaobo and others.
Petitions in support of Charter 08
and in protest over the detention of
Liu Xiaobo are circulating around
the world.
The arrest of Liu Xiaobo happened on
the eve of Human Rights Day and the
60th Anniversary of the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights. The
year 2008 is also the 110th
Anniversary of China¨s Wuxu
Political Reform, the 100th
Anniversary of China¨s first
Constitution and the 10th
Anniversary of China¨s signing of
the International Covenant on Civil
and Political Rights and the
soon-to-be 20th anniversary of the
Tiananmen Square crackdown against
students.
Charter ¨08 is well worth reading.
It sets out the political history of
China in its forward, then proposes
fundamental principles--freedom,
human rights, equality,
republicanism, democracy and
constitutional law!upon which the
government should be based. The
document advocates specific steps--a
new constitution, separation of
powers, legislative democracy,
independent judiciary, public
control of public servants,
guarantee of human rights, election
of public officials, rural-urban
equality, freedom to form groups,
freedom to assemble, freedom of
expression, freedom of religion,
civic education, protection of
private property, finance and tax
reform, social security, protection
of the environment, a federated
republic, truth and reconciliation.
Charter 08 lays forth an ambitious
agenda, one that would revolutionize
the political climate and governing
structures of China, but it
advocates for change not through
violence, but through citizen
participation. Is this naive?
Foolhardy? Or is this vision for
China one that will inspire and
empower its citizenry?
^We dare to put civic spirit into
practice by announcing Charter 08, ̄
declare the signatories. ^We hope
that our fellow citizens who feel a
similar sense of crisis,
responsibility, and mission, whether
they are inside the government or
not, and regardless of their social
status, will set aside small
differences to embrace the broad
goals of this citizens¨ movement.
Together we can work for major
changes in Chinese society and for
the rapid establishment of a free
and constitutional country. ̄
As citizens in the U.S. prepare to
inaugurate a new President, the
first African American President,
the country is not so much realizing
change as realizing in its electoral
process the ideals set forth over
200 years ago.
Ideas may be repressed for a time
and their authors may be persecuted,
but ideas and words matter.
Eventually they are the fuel for the
engine of change. Those who have the
courage to set them down and publish
them may turn out to be the founding
fathers on whose shoulders
generations will stand.
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