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The Economist - UK 2020-09-05

Efforts to boost the use of Mandarin in

schools angers ethnic Mongols

Inner Mongolia



Mongolingualism 

Towards a less Mongolian future




48

China


The Economist

September 5th 2020

F

or a business



that flouts the law in a police state, Mrs Hu’s pan-

cake cart is not hard to find. A tiny, unlicensed kitchen on

wheels, her pushcart appears each night between 11pm and dawn

on a road junction in central Beijing, between a centuries-old tem-

ple and a bus station. Neither summer heat nor snow deters Mrs

Hu. Only rain keeps her at home, because it clears the streets of

customers. On a recent night, diners munching her egg and onion

pancakes, perched outdoors on low plastic stools, ranged from

young hipsters to a bus driver still in her uniform. 

It is not the romance of the night that inspires Mrs Hu’s hours.

Working by day would increase the risks of trouble from the 

cheng-

guan

—poorly paid, widely disliked city-management officers who

enforce local regulations in urban areas. In Beijing the rules are

ever-less tolerant of street food, deemed unhygienic and unwor-

thy of a capital city. There has been one positive change: less than

five years ago 



chengguan 

were often violent, grabbing stallholders’

goods and demanding money. Now 

chengguan 

shoo vendors away

but do not hit them. Mrs Hu ascribes their improved manners to a

government campaign for “civilised law-enforcement”. 

A migrant from central China, she remains an outsider with

few rights although she has lived in Beijing for 24 years. She and

her husband once worked legally from a rented market stall. Then

two markets in a row were demolished in the name of modernity,

forcing the couple onto night-time streets with separate pancake

carts. Worldly wise, the pair stayed calm when the prime minister,

Li Keqiang, suggested this summer that encouraging street traders

might boost a covid-battered economy. Food carts may be wel-

comed by smaller cities but not in Beijing, says Mrs Hu. Indeed, the

capital is currently closing markets and sweeping away vegetable-

sellers from its streets. So she and her husband survive by keeping

their heads down and working hard. Like many, they live on the

margins of society, navigating an authoritarian system that wields

its powers more selectively than outsiders may suppose.

There is nothing kindly about that security machine, which

crushes all hints of political, religious or ethnic dissent or open

challenges to the Communist Party. The machine is bent on abol-

ishing privacy, with surveillance cameras on every corner and cen-

sors and algorithms scouring the online world for forbidden ideas.

Yet when public-security agencies encounter non-political rule-

breakers or even protesters, they can be unexpectedly willing to

turn a blind eye or make concessions to offenders.

Such haggling is common at the lowest levels of law-enforce-

ment, where the 



chengguan 

work. As luck would have it, a remark-

able documentary about these para-police has just secured a limit-

ed release in Chinese cinemas. “City Dream”, directed by Chen

Weijun, follows 

chengguan 

from the central (and, since then, vi-

rus-hit) city of Wuhan, as they match wits with Wang Tiancheng, a

70-year-old street trader with a genius for staging the sorts of noisy

protests that win the sympathy of a watching crowd, while humili-

ating officers sent to demolish his sprawling, unlawful street stall. 

Cities created 

chengguan 

in the late 1990s to tackle non-crimi-

nal forms of disorder, after the dismantling of the planned econ-

omy left urbanites less dependent on the state and triggered a wave

of rural migration into cities. The documentary begins in 2014,

shortly after Wuhan announced a revolution in city management

as part of a development drive. At the time 

chengguan 

had a grim

reputation across China, following a number of deaths caused by

officers as well as fatal attacks on them as they were carrying out

raids to demolish homes or clear informal markets.

High-ups in the city-management bureau loathe “Old Wang”, as

everyone calls him. “Close the gates! Old Wang is on his way!” they

yelp, as the former farmer heads to the 



chengguan 

offices, barrel-

chested, shirtless and demanding to see the boss. Sure that he

makes more money than he lets on, officials send patrolmen to spy

on his fruit sales (an undercover officer returns in tears, after Old

Wang grabs his notebook). A senior 



chengguan 

declares that the

street trader, who moved to Wuhan 14 years earlier from the central

province of Henan, should be renting a clean, respectable shop.

“That’s the real life of a city dweller,” the officer sniffs. In contrast,

street-level 



chengguan 

are grudgingly impressed by Old Wang’s

flair for drama. During several raids on his stall, the trader tells

gawking onlookers about his disabled son and cancer-stricken

wife. He slaps a 

chengguan

, tears up legal notices, accuses officers

of taking bribes to leave his competitors alone, threatens to com-

mit suicide and—in an astonishing moment—appeals to his tor-

mentors as fellow outcasts at the bottom of society. “Where is your

conscience?” Old Wang asks 



chengguan 

who have penned him

within a square formed of their riot shields. “A second ago you

were just like me. A man with no job.” None can meet his gaze.




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