Party's attempt to crack whip comes under fire
Adviser to State Council says calls for rights are legal and legitimate
A recent Communist Party circular warning officials against Western values appears to have been challenged from inside the political establishment.
Those who have written the circular "consider the people's legitimate calls for reform as activities by hostile forces and 'dissidents', and [are] thus wrongly estimating and analysing the situation", Yang Tianshi, a senior scholar and adviser, wrote in an essay shared online.
The Central Committee circular, a briefing on the ideological sphere, known as document No9, has caused concern among Chinese liberals. It suggests the Communist Party may have taken a more conservative, authoritarian direction in the first months of its new leadership.
The document has not been published. Its content can only be deduced from reports on party cadre briefings that appeared at the beginning of the month. Most of those were swiftly deleted to avoid public debate.
Cadres should "strengthen the guidance of public opinion, purify the internet's [ sic] environment, convey more positive energy [and] bring more positive voices", the circular read, according to a report on a briefing in Xianyang, Shaanxi .
Yang, a 77-year-old historian, is a member of the Central Literature and History Institute, a body of top academics that advises the State Council.
He shared his essay with an acquaintance who put it online, where it has quickly gained attention.