BEIJING â" The date says it all: the Taipei Womenâs Rescue Foundation, a leading womenâs rights group, was formally registered in September 1987, just two months after Taiwanâs leader, Chiang Ching-kuo, lifted martial law, legalizing the political opposition. Many civil society groups that had long been gathering ideas and forces sprang into action.
In todayâs Letter from China, I ask whether a leader in China might do something similar.
Living in China, itâs easy to see a pre-1987 Taiwan, in some ways. Under the mantle of one-party rule, decades of fast economic growth has produced wealth, social ferment, and a far more sophisticated, better-informed, better-off population with higher expectations than their parents and grandparents.
Itâs creating pressure for change. In an interview in Taipei, Justine Wang of the Taipei Womenâs Rescue Foundation said: âI feel thereâs a lot happening in China, but they have started late.â
Today, a quarter of a century after the changes in Taiwan, womenâs rights are mainstreamed in society and politics, said Ms. Wang.
â1987 was the important moment when we could set up social NGOs. It wasnât possible before that,â she said. âThereâs been big progress in the last two decades. People canât openly discriminate any more, though of course they can use less obvious methods.â
And in China
In one example of the differences, this week the Chinese Human Rights Defenders, a NGO based outside the Chinese mainland, called on the government to stop âharassing and persecutingâ civil society activists who want to contribute to the countryâs reporting on human rights to the United Nations. Instead, it should âallow members of civil society to play an important role in the process,â the group said. China does have civil society or quasi-civil society organizations but they are often subject to significant pressures from the state.
Mainland Chinese human rights activists have tried many times to have a say in the content of the reports China makes to the U.N. as part of the Universal Periodic Review, as itâs known, Chinese Human Rights Defenders said.
But many who have submitted suggestions, or requests to be included in the drafting process, have been harassed or detained, with at least one, Peng Lanlan, incarcerated since August last year for organizing efforts to press the government to disclose information it says is a âstate secret,â the group said.
âBy blocking citizensâ participation back home, the government has made UPR largely a pointless exercise in China,â the group said.
What would have to happen in China to bring about similar changes to Taiwanâs Can a strongman like Chiang Ching-kuo step forward Or will a strong group, such as the one that runs China and which Michael Hsiao, director of the Institute of Sociology at the Academia Sinica in Taipei, talks about, do that Is no one interested, leaving China somehow stuck in limbo, outside the current of world history