Hail the 60th anniversary of the People’s Republic of China


October 1st this year marks
the 60th anniversary of the founding of the People’s Republic of China (PRC). Along with hundreds of millions of people around the world, especially in the
vast continents of Asia, Africa and Latin America, but also among the advanced
and class conscious workers in the imperialist heartlands, Lalkar
extends its warmest and most heartfelt congratulations to the Communist Party
of China, the government of China and the great Chinese people on this
anniversary.

In the modern history of China, 1 October 1949
represents the moment when night became day, when the red sun rose in the east
and shed its rays, banishing forever the cruel darkness of starvation,
humiliation and subjugation.

Although the Chinese is one of the oldest
civilisations in human history, China’s modern history is held to begin in
1840. At that time, the decadence of its feudal rulers left the country at the
mercy of every rapacious imperialist pirate and scoundrel. With the first Opium
War of 1840-42, British imperialism led the charge to subjugate and partition China. Recalling this period, in his 1 July 2001 speech marking the 80th anniversary of the
founding of the Communist Party of China, the party’s then general secretary,
Comrade Jiang Zemin, described it as one where, “the feudal rulers surrendered
the country’s sovereign rights under humiliating terms, the whole society was
thrown into utter chaos caused by wars, the country became impoverished and weak
and the people lived in hunger and cold”.

Faced with this grim situation, the Chinese people
waged one heroic struggle after another, at the cost of many millions of lives,
and enlightened people strove to find a way to rejuvenate the nation and lift the
masses of people out of their wretched condition. But all these attempts ended
in failure. Hope returned to the Chinese people only with the liberating
science of Marxism-Leninism.

Comrade Mao Zedong, the great leader of the Chinese
people, summarised this historical learning curve in a characteristically
brilliant fashion:

From the time of China’s defeat in the Opium
War of 1840, Chinese progressives went through untold hardships in their quest
for truth from the Western countries…

Imperialist aggression shattered the fond
dreams of the Chinese about learning from the West. It was very odd  – why were
the teachers always committing aggression against their pupil? The Chinese
learned a good deal from the West, but they could not make it work and were never
able to realise their ideals. Their repeated struggles, including such a
country-wide movement as the Revolution of 1911, all ended in failure. Day by
day, conditions in the country got worse, and life was made impossible. Doubts
arose, increased and deepened. World War I shook the whole globe. The Russians
made the October Revolution and created the world’s first socialist state.
Under the leadership of Lenin and Stalin, the revolutionary energy of the great
proletariat and labouring people of Russia, hitherto latent and unseen by
foreigners, suddenly erupted like a volcano, and the Chinese and all mankind
began to see the Russians in a new light. Then, and only then, did the Chinese
enter an entirely new era in their thinking and their life. They found
Marxism-Leninism, the universally applicable truth, and the face of China began to cha
nge.

It was through the Russians that the Chinese
found Marxism. Before the October Revolution, the Chinese were not only
ignorant of Lenin and Stalin, they did not even know of Marx and Engels. The
salvoes of the October Revolution brought us Marxism-Leninism. The October
Revolution helped progressives in China, as throughout the world, to adopt the
proletarian world outlook as the instrument for studying a nation’s destiny and
considering anew their own problems. Follow the path of the Russians – that was
their conclusion
.”  (Mao Zedong, ‘On the People’s Democratic Dictatorship,
In commemoration of the twenty-eighth anniversary of the Communist Party of
China’, 30 June 1949)

As Stalin put it, the successful overthrow of
capitalism in Russia had “created a new line of revolutions against world
imperialism, extending from the proletarians of the West, through the Russian
revolution, to the oppressed nations of the East
.” (JV Stalin, ‘The
International Character of the October Revolution’, 1918)

Herein lies the great significance of the Chinese
revolution that triumphed in 1949 – it represented the decisive extension of
the Great October Socialist Revolution to the Asian continent. With the birth
of the People’s Republic of China, a vast, strong and united camp of socialism
and people’s democracy was brought into being, stretching uninterruptedly from Berlin to Shanghai and embracing a third of the globe. Moreover, in its very being, the
People’s Republic of China represented, and continues to represent, the
essential unity of the proletariat’s struggle for its social emancipation and
the struggle of the oppressed nations and peoples against imperialism.

Throughout the last six decades, China has consistently stood on the side of oppressed people fighting for their liberation.

When New China was scarcely one year old, it
despatched the Chinese People’s Volunteers to support the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea in its life-and-death struggle against US imperialism. Several hundred
thousand, including Comrade Mao Zedong’s own son, laid down their lives. Later,
when the Vietnamese people were waging their righteous war against US aggression, China discreetly sent many thousands of troops to defend, run and rehabilitate the
railways in the north of the country and to man the anti-aircraft defences of Hanoi and Haiphong, freeing their Vietnamese comrades-in-arms to head south to the
frontline.

When the Algerian people rose in struggle against
the French colonialists and proclaimed their Provisional Revolutionary
Government, China recognised and supported it from that very day. Likewise, China was among the very first countries to assist and support the ANC in South Africa and the PLO
in Palestine from the inception of their armed struggles. It was China that rendered the greatest and most decisive support to the liberation struggles in Mozambique and Zimbabwe. On more than one occasion, Comrade Mao Zedong personally spoke out in support
of the African-American struggle against racism and China insisted that a
delegation of the Black Panther Party led by Huey P Newton should visit six
moths before the visit of Richard Nixon. As Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe
told his fellow African leaders at the first China-Africa Summit, held in Ethiopia in December 2003: “China’s policies have always been pro-Africa, pro-Third World,
anti-imperial and anti-hegemonic
.”

When the Soviet Union and the socialist countries
of central and eastern Europe collapsed, it was to China that socialist Cuba turned to help it survive the ‘special period’. Today, with China’s steadily rising
economic strength, it is able to provide ever-increasing material support to
those countries seeking to stand up against imperialism for their independence,
such as Venezuela, Ecuador, the Democratic Republic of Congo and Belarus. Not for nothing did Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez declare, on arriving in China in September 2008: “We are in the land of Mao Zedong and I pay tribute to him. I am a
Maoist
.”

As far back as the days before the founding of the
People’s Republic, Comrade Mao Zedong declared:

This is a victory for the people of all China, and also a victory for the peoples of the whole world. The whole world, except the
imperialists and the reactionaries in various countries, is elated and inspired
by this great victory of the Chinese people. The struggle of the Chinese people
against their own enemies and the struggles of the peoples of the world against
their own enemies have the same meaning
.” (Mao Zedong, ‘Address to the
Preparatory Meeting of the New Political Consultative Conference’, 15 June
1949)

In the same speech, with remarkable foresight,
Comrade Mao warned that:

The
imperialists and their running dogs, the Chinese reactionaries, will not resign
themselves to defeat in this land of China. They will continue to gang up
against the Chinese people in every possible way. For example, they will
smuggle their agents into China to sow dissension and make trouble. That is
certain; they will never neglect these activities. To take another example,
they will incite the Chinese reactionaries, and even throw in their own forces,
to blockade China’s ports. They will do this as long as it is possible.
Furthermore, if they still hanker after adventures, they will send some of
their troops to invade and harass China’s frontiers; this, too, is not
impossible. All this we must take fully into account. Just because we have won
victory, we must never relax our vigilance against the frenzied plots for
revenge by the imperialists and their running dogs. Whoever relaxes vigilance
will disarm himself politically and land himself in a passive position. In view
of these circumstances, the people all over the country must unite to smash
resolutely, thoroughly, wholly and completely every plot against the Chinese
people by the imperialists and their running dogs, the Chinese reactionaries.
China must be independent, China must be liberated, China’s affairs must be
decided and run by the Chinese people themselves, and no further interference,
not even the slightest, will be tolerated from any imperialist country
.”

From that day to the present, events have fully
borne out Comrade Mao’s analysis. In response to China’s proletarian internationalist
support to the Korean people, the United States deployed its Seventh Fleet to
the South China Sea, preventing the People’s Liberation Army from liberating China’s island province of Taiwan. The reunification of Taiwan with the mainland remains the last
unfinished business of China’s cause of national liberation that began with the
struggle against the British invaders and drug traffickers in 1840. The United States maintained an economic blockade and embargo on China from 1950 to 1972. From 1949 until
today, imperialism seeks to send “troops to invade and harass China’s
frontiers”, from the wars in Korea and Vietnam, to the instigation of
terrorists in the border regions of Tibet and Xinjiang, to the attempts to
surround China with hostile military bases under the pretext of the ‘war on
terror’, and to the constant encroachment of US espionage planes and ships in
the South China Sea.

Equally, whilst China does not seek to quarrel with
any nation, but rather seeks friendship, cooperation and mutually beneficial
trade, the PRC has never tolerated any interference from any imperialist
country. China is indeed independent. China is indeed liberated. China’s affairs are indeed decided and run by the Chinese people themselves! As Comrade Mao
Zedong declared:

Ours will no longer be a nation subject to
insult and humiliation. We have stood up
.” (Mao Zedong, ‘The Chinese people
have stood up!’ Opening address at the First Plenary Session of the Chinese
People’s Political Consultative Conference, 21 September 1949)

In his previously quoted article, On the
People’s Democratic Dictatorship
, Comrade Mao Zedong sounded this note of
caution:

Twenty-eight years of our Party are a long
period, in which we have accomplished only one thing – we have won basic
victory in the revolutionary war. This calls for celebration, because it is the
people’s victory, because it is a victory in a country as large as China. But we still have much work to do; to use the analogy of a journey, our past work is
only the first step in a long march of ten thousand li. Remnants of the enemy
have yet to be wiped out. The serious task of economic construction lies before
us. We shall soon put aside some of the things we know well and be compelled to
do things we don’t know well. This means difficulties. The imperialists reckon
that we will not be able to manage our economy, they are standing by and
looking on, awaiting our failure
.”

Six decades on, imperialist daydreamers are still
waiting, but today it is increasingly obvious to all but the most myopic that
it is the capitalist system and not the socialist that is experiencing chronic
failure.

Whilst imperialism plotted their downfall, the
Chinese people got on with the hard job of building their country practically
from scratch. At its 2008 congress, in a unanimously adopted resolution on China, the Communist Party of Great Britain (Marxist-Leninist) (CPGB-ML) summed up this
herculean course as follows:

In nearly 60 years since the founding of the
People’s Republic, the Chinese people, under the leadership of the Communist
Party, and guided by the science of Marxism Leninism, and its concrete
application to their specific conditions, Mao Zedong Thought, have weathered
and overcome all manner of challenges and difficulties and have scored enormous
achievements in rebuilding their country along socialist lines, so that what
was, in 1949, one of the poorest, most backward and most wretched societies on
earth, is now advancing as a great world power, increasingly in the front ranks
of global economy, culture, science and technology
.

In the course of this process, the lives of the
Chinese people have been improved immeasurably, with hundreds of millions of
people lifted out of poverty
.”

Celebrating the 50th anniversary of the founding of
the People’s Republic at a function in Havana on 29 September 1999, Comrade
Fidel Castro observed:

Only socialism can feed 1.25 billion Chinese,
give them a home, a television for each Chinese family, and many other
household articles, and especially the essential resources for life. That is to
say, that country feeds approximately 22 percent of the world’s population with
seven percent of the world’s agricultural lands…The country went through
periods of starvation under the domination of the feudal lords and capitalism,
always allied with colonial and dominating powers, when the population was only
400 or 500 million. Today the population has tripled and hunger has been
eradicated forever
.”

In the last three decades, China has adopted a policy of widely introducing foreign capital, technology and expertise,
allowing the re-emergence and development of a domestic private sector, and
producing for export. The intention behind this policy has been to use a period
of peace to rapidly develop the country and to overcome backwardness. Referring
to this experience, the previously quoted congress resolution of the CPGB-ML
noted:

In introducing elements of a market economy,
the Chinese comrades have pointed out that their country is today only in the
primary stage of socialism. Alongside China’s undeniable achievements, serious
problems have arisen, including, but by no means limited to, wealth, income and
regional disparity, corruption, grave shortcomings in public education and
health care, and environmental degradation
.”

Just as we rejoice at all China’s great
achievements, we are greatly concerned by these issues, not only as we are
staunch friends of the Chinese people and earnestly wish them nothing but the
best, but also because such negative phenomena cannot but have an impact on the
image and prestige of socialism in the eyes of working and oppressed people
throughout the world. This matter becomes particularly acute when faced, as we
are today, with a cataclysmic crisis of the capitalist system.

Since he became General Secretary of the Chinese
Communist Party, Comrade Hu Jintao has laid great emphasis on addressing these
problems by returning to a scientific path of development. We are realists.
These major problems did not emerge overnight and they cannot be corrected
overnight either. But as we have always maintained, we wish our Chinese
comrades well in assessing these problems, in honestly and fearlessly analysing
their causes and consequences, and in finding a way out. It was VI Lenin who
declared that the test of a serious proletarian party lay not in its not making
mistakes but rather in its attitude to those mistakes and their correction.
Repeatedly in its history, the Chinese party has demonstrated that it is
possessed of this Leninist quality and we believe that this remains the case
and will remain the case in the future, too.

Due to China’s extensive integration into the
global economy, one that is still dominated by the capitalist mode of
production, as a result of the policies pursued over the last three decades, China cannot remain immune from some negative consequences of the current crisis. In
economic terms, this is reflected in a reduced rate of growth. In human terms,
it saw some 20 million migrant workers, previously employed in southern coastal
areas, where external capitalist investment has been concentrated, losing their
jobs in the early part of this year.

Nevertheless, it remains the case that, in the
words of the Financial Times, China today “is contributing more to
global growth than all developed economies put together
”. (ICBC, The Lex
Column
, 21 August 2009)

What this means concretely was elaborated by the New
York Times
in an article published on 23 August 2009:

In past global slowdowns, the United States invariably led the way out, followed by Europe and the rest of the world. But for the
first time, the catalyst is coming from China

Economists have long predicted that an
increasingly powerful China would come to rival and eventually surpass the United States in economic influence. While the American economy is still more than three
times the size of China’s, the nascent global recovery suggests that this
long-anticipated change could arrive sooner than had been expected
.

Such a shift would have significant
ramifications for the United States and the rest of the West, even after the
global economic recovery takes hold
.

“‘The economic centre of gravity has been
shifting for some time, but this recession marks a turning point,’ said Neal
Soss, chief economist for Credit Suisse in New York. ‘It’s Asia that’s lifting
the world, rather than the US, and that’s never happened before’
.”

The article further notes that the United States is
being shoved aside as an economic partner, in favour of China, in both Japan
and Western Europe, and, belying the oft repeated whinge of precisely such
imperialist house organs as the Financial Times and itself, which seek
to cast doubt on and ridicule China’s published figures for economic growth, it
notes:

Citigroup recently increased its estimate for
annual Chinese economic growth to 8.7 percent in 2009 from 8.2 percent, and to
9.8 percent next year from 8.8 pe
rcent.”

Almost exactly the same as China’s own figures!

And to what does the New York Times
attribute the comparative resilience of the Chinese economy? Why, to none other
than the fact that:

China’s government-dominated, top-down
economy is surging
”.

The no-doubt pejoratively intended inferences
notwithstanding, it seems that even the New York Times cannot now but
grudgingly concede the superiority of socialism over capitalism!

The article concludes with an important observation
as to how the shifting economic fortunes of China and the United States are starting to reshape the whole world:

“‘Asia is still relatively small in the world,
but it reflects how the world is changing, and economic power does translate,
of course, into political power,’ said Simon Johnson, a former chief economist
for the International Monetary Fund and now a senior fellow at the Peterson
Institute for International Economics. ‘You can use it to win friends and
influence people, as the Chinese are already doing in Africa and Latin America
.’”
(‘Asia’s recovery highlights China’s ascendance’)

For our part, in once again extending our
warmest fraternal congratulations to the Chinese communists, working class and
people, we prefer to give the final word to that great friend of the Chinese
people, that great proletarian revolutionary, VI Lenin:

In the last analysis, the outcome of the
struggle will be determined by the fact that Russia, India, China, etc., account for the overwhelming majority of the population of the globe. And
during the past few years it is this majority that has been drawn into the
struggle for emancipation with extraordinary rapidity, so that in this respect
there cannot be the slightest doubt what the final outcome of the world
struggle will be. In this sense, the complete victory of socialism is fully and
absolutely assured
.” (‘Better Fewer, But Better’, 2 March 1923, Collected
Works, Volume 33
)

Long live
the People’s Republic of China!

____________________________________

Celebrate
the 60th anniversary of the Chinese Revolution

Saturday 3 October 6.00 pm

Saklatvala Hall, Dominion Road, Southall UB2 5AA

Rally
with speakers from fraternal organisations followed by social. An excellent
opportunity to meet with comrades from the People’s Republic of China.

Organised by the CPGB-ML
and Hands off China. Further details from 07973
824742 or info@handsoffchina.org