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China's 'friends of nature' join the Tibetan antelope on the list of
endangered species
Teresa Poole meets the pioneering environment campaigners who face
hostility from
corrupt officials and death threats from loggers and illegal hunters
AT "Friends of Nature", China's only truly independent green pressure group, the
environmental cause has suddenly turned deadly serious.
Over in Western Sichuan province, a retired university professor member recently
alerted Friends of Nature to illegal logging by local forestry officials in
Hongya county. The local authority was brazenly flouting the ban imposed after
this summer's disastrous floods. After Friends of Nature tipped off sympathetic
national television reporters, the professor was told by the foresters that he
would "have to pay back with his head". For safety, he is now staying at
relatives away from his home city.
One of Friends of Nature's other big campaigns at the moment is to save the
Tibetan antelope from wholesale slaughter by poachers who kill the animal for its
shahtoosh fur. Four years ago the government official in charge of the wildlife
protection area in Qinghai province where the antelope live was killed in a
gunfight with poachers. His successor, Zhaba Duojie, an ethnic Tibetan government
official, died of gunshot wounds earlier this month, although his death is
thought to be suicide.
Thanks to the efforts of Friends of Nature, such cases now receive high profile
coverage in the Chinese media. The organisation has lobbied furiously inside
China in recent years to raise awareness of such issues as re-afforestation, the
protection of the gold snub-nosed monkey, environmental education in schools, and
the plight of the Tibetan antelope. Such an organisation would be commonplace in
most other countries, but in China Friends of Nature is arguably the only true
non-governmental organisation (NGO), a concept which is virtually a contradiction
in a Communist state.
The group started in 1994 and now has more than 500 individual members. Professor
Liang Congjie, its president and driving force, said the membership included
scientists, professors, office workers, entrepreneurs and even army personnel and
policemen. "The big triumph for me over the past five years is to have attracted
so many sincere and honest volunteers to join us," said Mr Liang, a retired
history professor. On his desk are piles of the letters that he receives daily
from people interested in the organisation's work. Mr Liang, who speaks perfect
English, met both Bill Clinton and Tony Blair on their recent China tours,
wheeled out by grateful embassy officials who were keen to demonstrate that there
was at least one independent NGO in China.
In Mr Liang's offices, groups of volunteers sit stuffing envelopes with mailshots
about activities and campaigns - an astonishing sight for China. But 66-year-old
Mr Liang treads a well-crafted path. "I always choose the battlefield that I am
quite sure I can win," he said. On the controversial Three Gorges Dam, for
instance, which has been under construction for several years, he said:
"Personally I am against it, I am not afraid of saying that openly. But it is too
late for us to do anything about it."
Recent events, however, have shown that the supposed "safe" route of promoting
causes in line with the government's own environmental policies is by no means a
soft option.
In September, the Friends of Nature member in Sichuan accompanied a Chinese
Central Television crew to film the widespread logging that was still going on
in Hongya county despite the new central government ban. The prime minister, Zhu
Rongji, was said to have watched the broadcast report. "That made him very angry
with the local forestry bureau," said Mr Liang. "And that made the local
officials very, very angry with us." After threats were made to the retired
professor, the police were called in. But the loggers have said they intend to
take revenge.
Mr Liang is sympathetic to the problems of local officials who must provide jobs
and welfare for loggers who will be left without work. But he is also visibly
exasperated at the uphill struggle involved in the implementation of what is
often official central government policy. In Yunnan, for instance, where Friends
of Nature won a temporary reprieve for the prime forest homes of the gold
snub-nosed monkeys, logging is also still going on.
In the campaign to save the Tibetan antelope from extinction, Mr Liang is seeking
international support. In response to his letter, Mr Blair replied that he
"shared your revulsion over the illegal slaughter". It is estimated that more
than 20,000 antelopes are illegally killed each year for the shahtoosh fur, which
is spun into gauze-like shawls which fetch thousands of pounds in Europe and Hong
Kong despite an international ban on the trade. Each dead animal yields just
125-150 grammes (4-5oz) of the fine throat fur, and photographs provided by
Friends of Nature show the mounds of animal carcasses left after the poachers
have long gone.
The idea of starting a green NGO to take action on such issues was dreamed up by
Mr Liang and some like-minded friends. "We began to think, why don't we do
something ourselves? People began to think, is it possible in China, would the
government allow us to do that?," he remembered. In 1994 they applied to the
Ministry of Civil Affairs, which must register all social organisations, but were
refused.
However, a second application, as a "secondary" NGO under the Academy of Chinese
Culture was approved. "No-one tries to interfere with my work," said Mr Liang.
Most of the funding comes from Western foundations and charities.
China has recently published new regulations governing all "private social
organisations" include a demand that they submit annual reports to the
government, submit to regular inspections of their funding, and uphold Communist
Party rule. Such rules are designed to stamp on any overtly political groups, but
Mr Liang does not think they will cause him any problems. "I don't think it will
affect me in a very substantial way," he said. Mr Liang is the first to admit
that Friends of Nature's status is enhanced by his own family background: his
father was China's most famous architect, a man who was persecuted terribly
during the Cultural Revolution. Mr Liang himself is a member of the Chinese
People's Political Consultative Conference.
Even those connections, however, does not always mean that the message gets
through. This summer's epic flooding has finally convinced the central government
to do something about deforestation in the upper reaches of China's big rivers.
"We had already warned them," said Mr Liang. "In autumn 1997 we sent a suggestion
to the central government saying that if you want to control the water, you have
to control the mountains. Unfortunately, this year's floods became a very good
opportunity for us to convince people," he said wryly.
So is he hopeful for the future of environmentalism in China? "It is a matter of
values, it is a matter of how you behave," he said. "More people are now refusing
to use throw-away chopsticks and polystyrene lunch boxes. It is still only a
small percentage, but it is a start."
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