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China's Xi calls for Marxism and intellectual loyalty
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) May 18, 2016


Hong Kong protesters detained after bid to stop China official
Hong Kong (AFP) May 19, 2016 - Hong Kong student pro-democracy leader Joshua Wong was among five protesters detained Thursday after they ran onto a motorway to intercept the motorcade of a top Chinese official during a highly-charged visit to the city.

Their bid came on the final day of a three-day trip by Zhang Dejiang, who chairs China's communist-controlled legislature, where frustrated protesters have been kept out of sight behind barricades in a security lockdown.

Zhang's visit is the first by such a senior official for four years and comes as concerns grow that freedoms are under threat in semi-autonomous Hong Kong as China tightens its grip.

Police chased the group of five protesters as they ran along a major highway in eastern Hong Kong which had been cleared for Zhang, with Wong carrying a sign calling for "self-determination".

The group were detained before Zhang's motorcade emerged from the motorway tunnel.

The protesters were all members of Demosisto, a political party led by Wong, who became the face of major pro-democracy rallies in 2014.

A video posted on the party's Facebook page showed the group being chased on foot and pinned to the ground by traffic police.

"(Protesters) rushed out near the tunnel front to voice out the demand of self determination and the anger of people against the interference of the Chinese government," Demosisto's Agnes Chow said in a statement.

Demosisto confirmed five of its members, including Wong and fellow high-profile young activists Nathan Law and Oscar Lai, were detained by police after the incident.

Hong Kong police had no immediate comment.

Zhang's visit was ostensibly for an economic conference, but has been widely seen as a conciliatory effort after frustration over lack of political reform sparked a fledgling independence movement, condemned by authorities in both Hong Kong and mainland China.

During the trip, Zhang sought to reassure Hongkongers the city would not be "mainlandised" but hit back at activists calling for more autonomy, labelling them separatists.

Activists said Zhang had not seen the real situation in Hong Kong due to the major security clampdown, which saw seven arrested for unfurling protest banners on hills and flyovers.

However, in an address to local tycoons, businessmen and officials Thursday morning, Zhang insisted he saw the city's residents were "full of happiness" during his trip.

"What I have seen is their faces which are full of happiness and comfort," he added.

He said he had listened to pro-democracy lawmakers during a rare meeting, but reminded his audience Thursday that Hong Kong's economic success was "due to the fact that it is backed by the mainland".

Zhang later visited a home for the elderly and boarded a plane leaving Hong Kong Thursday afternoon.

Hong Kong is semi-autonomous after being handed back to China by Britain in 1997 and enjoys freedoms unseen on the mainland, but there are concerns Beijing's interference is growing in a range of areas, from politics to education and the media.

China's Communist Party must ensure that philosophy and social science "unequivocally uphold" Marxist principles, President Xi Jinping told a high-level academic seminar, according to state media reports.

Xi's address to around 150 specialists was his latest move to exert greater authority over China's cultural sphere, following two similar gatherings earlier this year on his vision for the news media and the Internet, and came as the ruling party also seeks more control over universities.

The event on Tuesday was held a day after the 50th anniversary of the declaration of the Cultural Revolution, which saw China plunged into a decade of mayhem under Mao Zedong.

"Marxism is never the end of truth. It opens a path toward truth," the official Xinhua news agency quoted Xi as saying in a speech that ran for over an hour and a half.

According to the People's Daily, the party's official mouthpiece, Xi called for socialist theories with "Chinese characteristics".

The 19th-century German thinker's philosophy has evolved over time, Xinhua cited him as saying, adding that the ruling party must lead and manage the development of philosophy and social sciences.

Intellectuals in the field should be "staunch supporters of Party governance", he said.

Xi has in recent years called for higher education to play a larger role in "ideological guidance" and urged more teaching of Marxism in universities, where curricula remain tightly controlled and liberal scholars report increasing fears of censorship.

"Confidence in our culture should be strengthened, which is a power that is more basic, deeper and more lasting," he said, according to Xinhua.

The Communist party regularly espouses nationalism as part of its claim to a right to rule, and has acted more assertively under Xi both domestically and internationally.

Deng Yuwen, the former deputy editor of the Central Party School's journal, said the symposium's guest list showed that liberal scholars had been excluded in favour of leftists more prone to shun Western influences.

"Rightist intellectuals have completely lost the trust of the ruling party, while those who adhere to the 'Chinese model' are taking centre stage," he wrote on the Twitter-like Sina Weibo platform.

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