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      Dispatch from China:  
	Number 15 Has Left the Building  
	By Ramzy Baroud  
	Al-Jazeerah, ccun.org, April 19, 2010 
         Li Changchun is often referred to as one of the most powerful 
	  men in China, in Asia and, increasingly, in the world. He is a member of 
	  the Standing Committee of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of 
	  China's Central Committee. On April 8, he awaited our arrival at the Great 
	  Hall of the People in Beijing. Between him and I stood a group of 
	  newspaper editors from throughout Asia, along with giant pillars, thick 
	  walls and a strict protocol that had to be followed to the letter, or to 
	  the number.    Yes, to the number. I was Number 15. I needed to 
	  remember this fact at all times. I also needed to be constantly aware of 
	  the identities of Number 14 and Number 16. This was to ensure the lineup 
	  was adhered to without fail wherever we were - whether lining up outside 
	  the Great Hall of the People, standing in line to shake Li Changchun's 
	  hand, or sitting in the large, well-lit room among a circle of editors. 
	  The editors sat and assiduously listened to Li, who spoke with the 
	  authority and power of a man known to be Number 5 in China. Or was it 
	  Number 3? Frankly, I cannot remember; I was nervously trying to remember 
	  my own number, and the ones before and immediately behind me.    I 
	  was in Beijing to attend the China Daily-Asia News Network Conference. 
	  This was focused on climate change and the environmental challenges facing 
	  Asian countries, especially following the failure of the Copenhagen 
	  meeting last December. Media producers grappled with their responsibility 
	  towards the increasingly pressing subject. Chinese government officials 
	  labored to showcase their country's efforts in lowering carbon emissions, 
	  carefully juxtaposing their success with the failures of Western 
	  governments, and the US government in particular.    Major polluters 
	  took on the position that their companies were incessantly trying to curb 
	  emissions, and some went as far as to discuss the need to "educate the 
	  public" regarding their responsibility towards the environment. It took me 
	  a while to wrap my head around this one: the world's largest contributors 
	  to environmental damage reaching out to the public and asking them to play 
	  a positive role in challenging global warming and climate change? Go 
	  figure.    At times, and despite clearly sincere efforts put forward 
	  by newspaper editors, the whole event seemed an exercise in futility. The 
	  government official, as all government officials everywhere, blames some 
	  other official of some other government. The polluters argue that they too 
	  are doing their part, and are in fact practically adopting progressive 
	  stances.    A leading Coca-Cola Company executive who addressed the 
	  conference, for instance, sounded more like an environmental champion, a 
	  Greenpeace activist even. In the meanwhile, media men and women stood 
	  quietly puzzled; they needed the ad revenues from the company (and other 
	  similar companies), along with governmental approval to make their work 
	  possible. At the same time, they are, in theory, the voice of the 
	  voiceless, the representatives of those who are suffering, and will 
	  continue to suffer, as a result of the dramatic, rapid and destructive 
	  environmental challenges.    It's a stand-still. The trio has every 
	  interest in keeping the discussion alive, but very little reason to move 
	  forward in any substantive way. Any discussion of lowering carbon emission 
	  becomes immediately political: fingerprinting, accusations and more. A new 
	  cold war around the theme of global warming is already underway. The "US 
	  vs China" scenario will remain until a paradigm shift takes place. 
	  Meanwhile, the Maldives will continue to sink, followed by 14% of 
	  Bangladesh.    So what are the media to do? Most of them rely on the 
	  same business model that requires the constant funding of the same 
	  companies, and often governments that have themselves disproportionately 
	  polluted our environment. These companies and governments have also 
	  stifled the debate on finding a sensible exit from the quagmire in every 
	  way imaginable.    Perhaps the media should be reconsidering the 
	  entire business model. Those who are sincere in wanting to educate, engage 
	  and influence the public sphere need to first liberate themselves as far 
	  as possible from the controlling grip of corporations. Only then will they 
	  be able help us to act upon the challenges facing our world as a result of 
	  man-made environmental disasters    Until this happens, we will 
	  continue to talk gibberish, using all the right terms, all the positive 
	  clichés, and yet we will achieve nothing but a few feel-good moments at 
	  yet another conference in yet another crowded city, itself polluted to the 
	  core.    Now back to Li, No 5 (or 3). The man was in fact much more 
	  pleasant than one would expect, considering the very rigid protocols and 
	  security checks that greeted us. He spoke comfortably and freely. He joked 
	  often. He spoke of the need for a unified Asian media voice to counter the 
	  influence of Western media. He challenged accusations that China is a 
	  closed society, and spoke of the rapidly growing number of websites, 
	  blogs, and the increasing access of foreign journalists and media to his 
	  country.    In fact, the discussions at the forum by various Chinese 
	  officials and by Li himself were filled with juxtapositions and 
	  comparisons between China and the West, "us vs them", "they say, we say 
	  ..." The editors from Number 1 through Number 18 (myself included) 
	  listened and politely nodded.    If the world can indeed afford a 
	  new cold war on political, economic and trade grounds, the environment can 
	  hardly afford such quarrels. The icecaps are melting; the Borneo 
	  rainforests are shrinking by the day; the list of endangered species is 
	  growing; drought, floods and other such tragedies are affecting millions, 
	  destroying lives and scarring generations.    The fact remains that 
	  human suffering simply cannot be politicized. And it must no longer be 
	  held hostage to numbers, clichés and slogans.    - Ramzy Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net) 
	  is an internationally-syndicated columnist and the editor of 
	  PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is My Father Was a Freedom 
	  Fighter: Gaza's Untold Story (Pluto Press, London), now available on 
	  Amazon.com.  
  *****   Visit my website:
	  www.ramzybaroud.net. Also watch 
	  Aljazeera's documentary about my latest book: My Father was a Freedom 
	  Fighter: Gaza's Untold Story. (Pluto Press; Palgrave Macmillan, 2010). The 
	  subtitled program is available at YouTube in two parts:
	  Part I &
	  
	  Part II. Then, check out this short film (in
	  English and
	  Arabic) 
	  about the book. The book is available from
	  Pluto 
	  Press (UK),
	  
	  Amazon UK and
	  
	  Amazon. 
       
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