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Thousands Mark Anniversary of China's Tiananmen Square Crackdown

VOA News June 04, 2011

Demonstrators hold a candlelight vigil for protesters crushed during the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests in Beijing at the Liberty Square of the Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall, in Taipei, Taiwan, June 4, 2011.

The Chinese cities of Beijing and Hong Kong were the scenes Saturday of demonstrations to mark the 22nd anniversary of the bloody Tiananmen Square crackdown during which hundreds, perhaps thousands, died.

It was on June 4, 1989, when the Chinese government sent tanks and soldiers into the square in central Beijing, the Chinese capital, to crush weeks of pro-democracy demonstrations.

The anniversary is being marked in the midst of another Chinese government crackdown, this one against activists, lawyers, writers and bloggers.

The U.S. State Department has been joined by the government in Taiwan in calling on China to release jailed dissidents and account for those killed, detained or missing in the Tiananmen Square crackdown. But a Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman insisted the matter is closed.

The group Chinese Human Rights Defenders said Saturday that security officers took former government official Bao Tong to an unknown location this week. And the Information Center for Human Rights and Democracy said liberal intellectual Chen Ziming and many others have been placed under house arrest.

Thousands Mark Anniversary of China's Tiananmen Square Crackdown | News | English
 
Thousands mark in Hong Kong the 22nd anniversary of Tiananmen Square

4 June 2011 47 views No Comment BY: BNO News

HONG KONG (BNO NEWS) -- Tens of thousands of people on Saturday attended a candlelight vigil in Hong Kong to mark the 22nd anniversary of the 1989 Tiananmen Square crackdown on the pro-democracy movement in Beijing, Radio Television Hong Kong reported.

According to organizers, 150,000 people attended the vigil to remember those who lost their lives 22 years ago. Participants wore black as a sign of mourning, held up candles and sang solemn songs.

"I am here with a heavy heart, it is very emotional for me," Gladys Liu, a 48-year-old mother-of-two said. "I still remember the scenes - how the army tanks were sent in to break up the student-led protests. I was following the news closely, I never thought it would turn so violent."

The government sent in tanks and soldiers to clear Beijing's Tiananmen Square on the night of June 3-4, 1989, following six weeks of pro-democracy protests. An official verdict after the protests called them a "counter-revolutionary rebellion" although the wording has since been softened.

Earlier on Saturday, Taiwan President Ma Ying-jeou urged China to release political dissidents in a statement marking the 22nd anniversary of the military crackdown on protesters. He said mainland China's economy has been growing rapidly for more than 20 years and surpassed Japan last year to become the second largest economy in the world. But he said that its record in the areas of democracy and human rights "stands in stark contrast."

Channel 6 News » Thousands mark in Hong Kong the 22nd anniversary of Tiananmen Square
 
Tiananmen anniversary brings new China detentions

By CHRISTOPHER BODEEN, Associated Press – 13 hours ago

BEIJING (AP) — Chinese security forces rounded up more government critics ahead of Saturday's anniversary of the crushing of the 1989 pro-democracy movement centered on Beijing's Tiananmen Square, adding to an already harsh crackdown on dissent, activists said.

The Foreign Ministry, meanwhile, lashed out at the U.S. government over calls for a full accounting of the military assault on civilians 22 years ago, saying the issue was closed.

"A clear conclusion has already been made concerning the political turmoil that happened in the late 1980s," spokesman Hong Lei was quoted as saying by the official Xinhua News Agency.

Stricter measures against dissidents are routine on the June 4 anniversary, but this year coincide with the most sweeping suppression campaign in many years. Hundreds of activists, lawyers and bloggers have been questioned, detained or simply have disappeared in the four-month campaign that aims to quash even the possibility of a pro-democracy movement forming along the lines of those sweeping the Arab world.

Bao Tong, a former aide to the late liberal Communist Party Secretary Zhao Ziyang, was taken to an unknown location by security officers this week along with his wife, according to Chinese Human Rights Defenders, a group that publicizes information on dissidents collected from sources within China.

Bao served a prison sentence following the military crackdown, while Zhao, his former boss, was deposed for sympathizing with the protesters and lived out his life under house arrest in Beijing. Calls to Bao's home rang unanswered Saturday.

Ding Zilin, who founded a group for people whose children were killed in the crackdown, was placed under house arrest while a number of former activists in the student-led protest movement were taken from their homes or told not to go out, the group said.

Chen Ziming, whose liberal think tank sought to mediate between the students and Communist Party leaders, was told he would not be permitted to leave home before June 10, the Hong Kong-based Information Center for Human Rights and Democracy said.

A number of other activists have been warned not to leave home, issue statements, or speak to media, according to the two groups.

As usual, the anniversary was ignored by China's entirely state-controlled media while Tiananmen Square in the heart of the capital was open under heavy security.

Twenty-two years later, few young Chinese remember the events that marked the last popular challenge to Communist rule in the country. The decades since have seen the economy boom and the Communist Party relinquish much of its day-to-day control over many areas of society while still making no significant moves toward changing the one-party authoritarian political system.

The Chinese government has never fully disclosed what happened when the military crushed the weekslong Tiananmen protests, which it branded a "counterrevolutionary riot." Hundreds, possibly more, were killed when troops backed with tanks fought their way to the square into central Beijing on the night of June 3-4.

In Hong Kong, which returned to Chinese rule in 1997 but maintains its own British-style legal system, the anniversary was being marked with a candlelight vigil with usually draws tens of thousands of people.

In Taiwan, the self-governing island democracy that China claims as its own territory, President Ma Ying-jeou issued a statement calling on China to respect human rights, institute political reforms and release imprisoned dissidents.

Beijing usually avoids discussing the crackdown and the Foreign Ministry's statement displayed the government's growing tendency to confront Washington over sensitive issues. Hong referred to recent remarks by State Department spokesman Mark Toner urging China to account for those killed, injured and detained in the crackdown, along with a similar call from House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi.


The Associated Press: Tiananmen anniversary brings new China detentions
 
Taipei awaits Ai Weiwei with 1001 chairs

2011/06/04 20:41:01

Taipei, June 4 (CNA) A large chair installation work featuring the Chinese name of detained artist and activist Ai Weiwei was set up in Taipei Saturday -- the 22nd anniversary of the Tiananmen Square Massacre -- to call for Ai's release.

Bei Ling, an artist from China who has been barred from entering his home country since 2000, used 1,001 empty chairs to piece together the three characters of Ai's name in Liberty Square at 6: 04 p.m.

"The chair installation work is a symbolic gesture. It means Taipei is waiting for Ai and that Taipei is part of the global action against Ai's detention," Bei told reporters.

Bei, based in Germany, has been invited by Taipei City Government as a resident artist from June to August.

Ai, a 54-year-old Chinese avant-garde artist and political activist, was detained in China April 3 as he was preparing to board a flight to Hong Kong. He has been charged with unspecified economic crimes.

Over the past two months, artists and activists in the international community have been calling on Beijing to free Ai.

Demonstrations against his detention have been held in Europe, the U.S. and Hong Kong. Ai's wife Lu Qing was allowed to visit him briefly on May 16.

Bei said Ai has been a good friend of his for more than 20 years. When the Tiananmen incident occurred in Beijing in 1989, they were both in New York and had given support to students fighting for democracy inside and outside China.

Bei described Ai as one of the most influential Chinese artists in the contemporary art scene and said the idea of setting up 1,001 empty chairs in Taipei was actually a tribute to Ai's 2007 "Fairytale" exhibition in Germany.

At that exhibition, Ai set up 1,001 Ming and Qing dynasty chairs in Kassel and flew in 1,001 Chinese workers who had never been to any other foreign country before as part of his living exhibition and to symbolize his call for the freedom of Chinese workers, Bei explained.

Ai was named by Time magazine this year as one of the 100 most influential people in the world. The Taipei Fine Arts Museum is scheduled to host a solo exhibition featuring Ai's works at the end of this year. (By Hermia Lin) ENDITEM/ls

Taipei awaits Ai Weiwei with 1001 chairs - CNA ENGLISH NEWS
 
Global Call to Raise Awareness of Tienanmen Square Massacre

Saturday, 04 June 2011 15:35 YC. Dhardhowa, The Tibet Post International

During this 22nd anniversary of June 4th, Tibetans in exile, Chinese and Vietnamese Community in solidarity call on supporters around the world taking to the streets to highlight the broader crackdown in China, as well as the situation in Ngaba worsened through April till now. As Tibetans around the world are commemorating this evening, the anniversary of the massacre in Tiananmen Square, and are drawing comparisons with the recent Chinese repression at Kirti Monastery of Ngaba region of Tibet: peaceful human rights demonstrations violently repressed by the armed police and troops, followed by Phuntsok's self-immolation to mark the third anniversary of bloody crackdowns in all parts of Tibet including Tibetan capital, Lhasa.

"Tibetans, Vietnamese and supporters from seven organizations stand in solidarity with Chinese students, labor organizers, and pro-democracy advocates as their struggle for a democratic and Transparent China was violently crushed by the tanks in Tiananmen Square (Note 1)," said Brigitte Graefin von Bulow, Chair of United Nations for a Free Tibet, "We urge the Chinese government to review the events of June 4, 1989, and to have the courage and far-sightedness to embrace more truly egalitarian principles and pursue a policy of greater accommodation and tolerance of diverse views." This is also promoted by His Holiness the Dalai Lama.

In recent days, hundreds of Chinese dissidents have been detained and harassed since the Jasmine Revolution separated in China, which obviously led to the worries and fears in the hearts of Chinese leaders. Meanwhile, the Military Siege of Tibetan Monastery in Ngaba continues with armed police and troops on high alert while international observers and media are still banned from the region.

"June 4th marks the military crackdown on the pro-democracy movement in Beijing's Tiananmen Square in 1989, because Deng Xiaoping dared to use defense forces against unarmed students and citizens, which led to another 22 years' success in maintaining Communist Red China. ", said Chin Jin of the Federation for a Democratic China, "The true meaning of June 4th should not be just limited to the annual commemoration, but a wake-up call on awareness raising of the democracy and freedom in China day and night...We need to leave no stone unturned on our mission of seeing the realisation of a truly democratic China."

A press statement was released on 4th May by seven NGOs including United Nations for a Free Tibet, Federation For A Democratic China, The Joint Working Committee for the Chinese Democratic Movement, Youth Vietnamese group fighting for Freedom, Democracy, and Human Rights for Vietnam, The youth Vietnamese group Pho Duc Chinh (Southern California, USA), The Vietnamese Heritage and Freedom Flag Movement and the Freedom Fighters PalTalk Group of South California, USA. Here together they demand International society to:

- Press their government to issue a public statement of concern about the recent crackdown in Tibet and China, and to put an End to China's Terrorist Attacks and Expansionism in the Southeast Asia Sea and to stop the China's terrorist attacks against Vietnamese fishermen:
- Convey to China's leaders the message that the release of all Prisoners of conscience and its security forces must withdraw from Ngaba region of Tibet.
- Insist governments send embassy representatives to express concern to relevant Chinese Ministries.
- Push for international observers and media to be given unfettered access.
- Solidarity protest and vigils will be held in British, Germany, and the United States, on the Tiananmen anniversary, June 4th.

The Tiananmen Square massacre occurred on 4 June 1989. Hundreds of people lost their lives when Chinese troops crushed the pro-democracy protests that began in April that year. The exact number of deaths remains unknown as the Chinese government has refused to acknowledge the incident or the deaths. Thousands of people were jailed at the time for participating, promoting or connections with the pro-democracy protests.

Global Call to Raise Awareness of Tienanmen Square Massacre
 
Tiananmen Mothers: "On June 4, the whole world wept"

by Madri di Tiananmen

Beijing (AsiaNews) - This year, we approach the 22nd anniversary of the Tiananmen Democracy Movement at a time when the fight for democracy, freedom, and human rights in North Africa and the Middle East is spreading like wildfire. As relatives of those killed in the 1989 movement, our memories are still fresh and our pain is unbearable when we look back at the tragic outcome of that unparalleled disaster.

We have always firmly believed that everything that happened during the June Fourth crackdown is engraved in the people’s hearts; the Chinese people, especially Beijingers, cannot forget the events of June Fourth. They cannot forget the men and women who were shot and crushed to death by the Chinese army troops. The June Fourth Massacre will not be forgotten, even though it has been downplayed and blocked among the people in China. It shall forever exist in people’s hearts. It has been indelibly etched into history.

On that frightful night of June 3, 1989, the Chinese army troops, protected by the darkness of night and following the way opened for them by tanks and armored vehicles, moved toward Tiananmen Square from all directions, strafing and chasing people to kill them as they advanced. Wherever they went, students and civilians suffered heavy casualties. When the student demonstrators withdrew orderly and peacefully from Tiananmen Square in the early morning of June 4, the army tanks pursued them from behind and crushed them, killing and seriously injuring more than a dozen students right there. Even on June 6, the government had not stopped their military action. That day, on Fuxingmenwai Street alone, three people were killed and three were critically injured; the youngest of the injured was only 13 years old. In an instant, the sky fell and the earth sank in the whole city of Beijing. Wailing and sobbing were heard everywhere. In an instant, young faces and handsome bodies, one after another, were turned to dust and vanished from the land where they had lived.

So far, we have spent 22 years and have documented 203 victims of June Fourth. There are still many victims we have not found, or whose relatives of whom we have no information.

Among the 203 known victims, some were beaten to death when protesting against the army’s use of violence against civilians; some were shot while rescuing the wounded or carrying the dead; some were chased by martial law troops into residential alleys and streets and killed; some were shot right in their own homes by stray bullets of the martial law troops; and some were shot and killed while taking photographs at the scene. Our repeated investigation and verification show that not a single one of the victims committed any violent act. They were all peaceful demonstrators and citizens.

We have the names, genders, ages, work units, and occupations of most of these victims. We have the home addresses, school names, and grade levels of all the students. They died tragically and majestically. We cannot help but sink into despair every time we think of them.

Let us who still live — your parents, your husbands and wives, your brothers and sisters, your sons and daughters — weep for you and mourn your passing! Let those who are middle-aged, but especially those who are young, stand in silent tribute and pay you their respect!

An old saying goes, “There is no avoiding the sins committed by the heavens, nor can man escape from paying for the sins he commits.” The June Fourth massacre was by no means a casual act, but an act with the highest level decision makers and direct executors. Some have since died, others still live. The sins they committed cannot escape scrutiny under law. As creditors of this huge historic debt, we all understand the unshakeable law: “It is right and proper to repay a debt owed.”

We have been steadfast in our difficult struggle over the past twenty some-odd years to restore the damaged reputations of the dead and to comfort the souls that have yet to find peace. We have written many times to the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress, asking them to give an earnest and responsible account of the killing of the innocent victims during June Fourth. We also urged the Standing Committee to change their attitude of indifference to the will of the people and their willful ignorance of the pleas of the families of the dead, and to open a direct and sincere dialogue about the victims of June Fourth with their families. But we have not received a reply to any of our requests.

In late February 2011, on the eve of the annual “Two Congresses” — the National People’s Congress (NPC) and the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC) — a victim’s relatives who are among the Tiananmen Mothers group were contacted by the public security department in their district for so-called private communication and exchange of opinions. Soon after, in early April, the public security personnel had another talk with that family. The visitors did not speak of making the truth public, carrying out judicial investigations, or providing an explanation for the case of each victim. Instead, they only raised the question of how much to pay, emphasizing that this was meant for that individual case and not for the families in the group as a whole.

The Tiananmen Mothers have repeatedly appealed to the government over the past 16 years for dialogue, yet government authorities have ignored us. This year, the silence was finally broken. This should have been welcome. But what in fact does this belated response mean? If the authorities merely want to settle the June Fourth matter with money and to do it under the table, then what kind of results will this produce?

In 1995, we began making three demands to resolve the June Fourth issue: truth, compensation, and accountability. In 2006, in accordance with the circumstances at that time, we added a supplemental resolution: because resolving the June Fourth issue impartially requires a certain process, we can adopt the principle of tackling the simpler problems first. The issues with serious differences in opinion that cannot be readily agreed upon—for example, the true nature of the events of June Fourth—can be temporarily set aside. Instead, we can first settle the issues involving the basic rights and interests of the victims. There are six issues, including removing all surveillance and personal restrictions imposed upon the June Fourth victims and their families; allowing the families of the dead to mourn their loved ones without interference; and the relevant government departments’ providing pure humanitarian assistance to the victims experiencing hardships. This supplemental resolution has a basic principle and a bottom line. The bottom line is this: the souls of those killed during June Fourth shall not be defiled; their families shall not be dishonored. We hereby reiterate today: all matters can be discussed except these two.

Our door to dialogue with the government has remained open at all times. For any endeavor, it is always the start that is most difficult. As a show of good faith, the government should dispatch or appoint an official body to be responsible for the dialogue, rather than using the public security or state security personnel who monitor and follow us every day to “talk” with us. This is improper and pointless. So as to reflect the inclusive nature of the dialogue, we hope that, rather than individual discussions, the government will seek out many victims’ families—not one, not two, but three, four, or even a dialogue team organized by the victims’ families—for talks. We hope it will not be private communications, but an open dialogue, forthright and aboveboard, with all issues on the table, with no facts concealed or differences covered up, and one that strives to fulfill our responsibilities to the dead and to history. We harbor no illusions that the issues of June Fourth can be resolved in a single step. If there are discussions, then they should be real discussions, to resolve issues point by point, so as to ultimately arrive at a unanimous or basically unanimous conclusion.

Since the start of this year, demonstrations and protests calling for freedom and democracy have erupted in countries across the Middle East and North Africa. The Chinese government has referred to these popular protest movements categorically as “turmoil”; at no point has it mentioned the calls for freedom and democracy. Why? The answer is fear. It is afraid that the situation in the Middle East and North Africa will spread to mainland China, and worried that it will give rise to events similar to the 1989 Democracy Movement. The authorities have therefore tightened control on civil society and intensified repression, resulting in a serious deterioration of human rights in China; in particular, the situation since February of this year has been the worst since June Fourth. It has been the harshest period since June 4, 1989. Silence has reigned across the country. To our surprise, it was against this grim backdrop that public security agencies have initiated private, individual conversations and dialogues with some of the families of the June Fourth victims. How can this not be strange?

CHINA Tiananmen Mothers: "On June 4, the whole world wept" - Asia News
 
Tiananmen legacy: Crush any hint of dissent

In 1989, a movement started to spread rapidly across the country and the Communists realized they could not allow that to happen again

By Jonathan Manthorpe, Vancouver Sun June 4, 2011

A man stands in front of a column of tanks on Chang'an Avenue near Tiananmen Square in Beijing on June 5, 1989. Today marks the 22nd anniversary of the June 4 military crackdown on the 1989 pro-democracy movement.

The legacy of the crushing of the Tiananmen proreform demonstrations 22 years ago today is that the Chinese Communist Party is perhaps even more ready and prepared to stifle dissent than it was then.

In May and June of 1989 it was only with the greatest reluctance that the Communist party elders authorized the premier, Li Peng, to declare martial law. And that was only after it had become clear that the weeks of student-led demonstrations in Beijing's central square had inspired a national uprising against the regime in hundreds of cities across China.

But only a few days ago, the party secretary of Inner Mongolia declared martial in a preemptive strike against ethnic Mongols protesting the killing of their brethren by Han Chinese.

After the Tiananmen Square protest was broken up on June 4, 1989, arrested demonstrators went through a formal legal process (such as it is in China) and at least five remain in prison.

But when Beijing became apprehensive earlier this year that China would be infected by the spirit of the Jasmine Revolutions sweeping the Middle East, authorities began detaining scores of people without any legal process and in defiance of the country's own constitution.

The message that the Communist party took from those events 22 years ago was that it must squash any group that looks as though it might become a national organization. Any events or figures who might become an umbrella or rallying point for unrest and dissent are to be eradicated immediately.

This strategy has been largely successful.

Exactly the same abuses of power and endemic corruption still thrive in the Communist party as they did when the students demanded reform in 1989.

According to official Beijing government figures, there are about 100,000 "mass incidents" each year -nearly 300 a day -as people protest against party corruption and venality.

But the authorities have prevented the emergence of any organization that could gather this storm of discontent into a national uprising.

Beijing's most alarming moment, perhaps, came one Sunday morning shortly before the 10th anniversary of the Tiananmen crackdown in 1999. Leaders in their villas in the walled Zhongnanhai compound next to the Forbidden City awoke to find about 15,000 members of the Falun Gong health and spirituality group gathered outside protesting persecution.

Leaders were appalled that these people had come to Beijing from all over China at a time when security in the capital was especially tight and without the authorities having any prior warning.

The group was quickly labelled an "evil cult," its members have been rounded up in their thousands and treated with the utmost brutality.

The authorities were equally swift to respond with detentions and trumped-up charges of subversion when a group of intellectuals used the attention focused on China by the Beijing Olympic Games to launch Charter 08. This was a call for the introduction of the rule of law and reforms creating a truly representative and responsible political system.

Many of the Charter 08 signatories were again rounded up this year to prevent infection from the Arab Spring.

But what has perhaps caused the Communist party the most anxiety is the arrival of the Internet and the growth of online communities that are very difficult to control.

The government has hired an army of tens of thousands of censors to monitor the Net and to immediately shut down sites, communities or conversations that are deemed dangerous.

It has had limited success and there is now a major industry both inside and outside the country constantly finding new ways to get around "The Great Firewall of China."

But while the Internet has become a major forum for Chinese of all ages to vent their frustrations and lambaste their rulers, there are no solid indications so far of it becoming the rallying place for serious rebellion.

As well as repression, Beijing aims to smother dissent by keeping the economy growing at a rate which meets the ever rising expectations of the Chinese, especially in the cities.

Economic growth plus corruption have also produced a very wealthy class of about 500,000 people, according to a recent report by the China Merchants Bank.

But, according to the report, these people feel a high degree of insecurity as the Communist party prepares to appoint next year and in 2013 its fifth generation of leaders since the 1949 revolution.

There seems to be apprehension among these people that they may become targets in any economic downturn. They also know full well that Chinese law provides absolutely no protection for their homes, businesses or money if the party decides to confiscate them.

So, the bank found, that 60 per cent of this moneyed class are either in the process of emigrating through investments overseas in places such as Canada, the U.S., Europe and Australia. Or, they have already made secure investments abroad and have acquired another citizenship as insurance against dark days ahead.

Read more: Tiananmen legacy: Crush any hint of dissent
 
Tourists flock to Tiananmen Square for anniversary

BEIJING — Thousands of Chinese and foreign tourists flocked to Tiananmen Square on Saturday, the anniversary of the deadly 1989 crackdown on mass pro-democracy protests, amid a noticeable police presence.

The sensitive anniversary of the brutal June 4 army action in the heart of Beijing comes as the Chinese government wages its toughest clampdown on dissent in years, rounding up dozens of lawyers, writers and artists in recent months.

Visitors clutching cameras and umbrellas poured through security checkpoints into the giant square but many shied away from answering questions about the date or denied any knowledge of the events that took place 22 years ago.

A university student surnamed Li from Inner Mongolia in north China -- where protests erupted late last month -- said he was too young to remember the 1989 pro-democracy movement but had heard about it.

"I've heard adults talking about it. It was a university students' protest movement," Li, 24, told AFP as he strolled around the square where demonstrators rallied for weeks for democratic reform before the army's deadly intervention.

Hundreds, perhaps thousands, are believed to have died when the government sent in tanks and soldiers to clear the square on the night of June 3-4, 1989.

An official verdict after the protests called them a "counter-revolutionary rebellion" although the wording has since been softened.

An AFP journalist saw a number of plainclothes police wearing earpieces and carrying walkie-talkies wandering around the square as tourists posed for photographs in front of a portrait of Chinese revolutionary leader Mao Zedong.

A retired man from the northeastern city of Changchun told AFP he "didn't know" about the anniversary, before walking away.

American tourist Sue Lorenz, 61, said she knew about the significance of June 4.

"It was the anniversary of the Tiananmen standoff between the students and the military," Lorenz told AFP before several police intervened and stopped the interview.

Rights groups including New York-based Human Rights Watch have repeated calls for China to be held accountable for its past and present actions, but Beijing on Thursday reiterated its position that the matter was closed.

"As for the political turbulence that took place in the last century in the late 1980s, the Communist Party and government have already made a conclusion," foreign ministry spokesman Hong Lei told reporters.

China attempts to block any public discussion or remembrance of the events by hiding away key dissidents in the run-up to June 4 each year, taking them into custody or placing them under house arrest, friends and activists say.

Those taken away this week include Bao Tong, a former top aide to Zhao Ziyang, the Communist Party head who was purged for opposing the use of force in June 1989.

Chinese Human Rights Defenders said Bao and his wife were taken away by security officials on June 1 and their location was not known.

Since mid-February, as protests spread across the Arab world leading to the toppling of leaders in Tunisia and Egypt, Chinese authorities have detained dozens of lawyers, activists and dissidents in an ongoing clampdown on dissent.

Earlier this week, activists said Chinese police had for the first time raised the possibility of compensation for the families of those killed in the Tiananmen crackdown.

The Tiananmen Mothers group said in an annual open letter this week that police have twice met relatives of one victim beginning in February.

The letter said, however, that police did not discuss a formal apology for the killings or a public account of who ordered the shootings -- two of the group's long-standing demands.

AFP: Tourists flock to Tiananmen Square for anniversary
 
Chinese press silent on Tiananmen Square anniversary

By All The Tea Jun 04, 2011 7:41AM UTC

By Robert Sullivan

Editorial desks across China should’ve been burning the midnight oil yesterday – this year’s anniversary of the 1989 Tiananmen Square crackdown in Beijing is one of the most-nerve racking in years for Chinese officials, in the midst of the ‘Arab Spring’ revolutions playing out in the Middle East, the continued detention of popular dissident Ai Weiwei, and protests over the past two weeks in Inner Mongolia.

Life is relaxed as ever though at the mouthpiece of the Communist Party, the People’s Daily (人民日报). Among the featured stories on their China news page on the eve of June 4 was a heart-wrenching piece on the plight of 18,000 migratory birds that have been forced to flee Honghu Lake in Hubei province due to the ongoing drought in Central China.

According to Wen Feng, head of marsh protection at the Honghu Wetland Nature Reserve:

Normally, about 20,000 summer birds come to the lake in early April and fly away by the end of August. But this year, most of the birds have come and gone…migratory birds are very sensitive to the marsh environment.

The China Daily (中国日报) also tackled core issues, reporting on a campaign by equestrian enthusiasts to promote riding horses to work this week to mark World Environment Day on Sunday.

Compared to being stuck in traffic jams during rush hour, riding a horse is a much more convenient mode of transportation.

Xinhua (新华通讯社), meanwhile, stuck to slightly more serious matters, leading with a story on a visit to Beijing by a delegation from Mozambique. Of particular note was their use of the word ‘fruitful’ and their insightful summary of China’s policy on Africa:

[China] supports the practice that African nations solve their own problems through dialogues and in the Africa-style way.


To be fair, even the privately owned and widely respected Economic Observer didn’t cover Tiananmen, though it is occasionally critical on certain economic and political policies.

The Southern Metropolis Daily in Guangzhou has, however, tested the waters recently and is one of the more daring papers in the country. Last year it briefly ran a cartoon on its website to mark International Children’s Day on June 1, which depicted a child drawing a row of tanks very similar to the famous ‘Tank Man’ photo. And three weeks ago, the paper reposted a daring editorial on the 2008 Sichuan earthquake that had previously been taken down from its site.

Tiananmen may seem to be too sensitive a starting point towards a freer press, but put in context with other taboos such as the Great Leap Forward and Cultural Revolution, which killed millions, it shouldn’t be. Thankfully the rapidly developing presence of the blogosphere and social media in China has ensured that mainstream Chinese media outlets feel the pressure to get a little more assertive if they want stay relevant and maintain their readership. In the future, hopefully the big Chinese papers will have something more substantial than stories on migratory birds to contribute on June 4.
Chinese press silent on Tiananmen Square anniversary | Asian Correspondent
 
Tiananmen protesters still jailed, decades on

Updated Sat Jun 4, 2011 8:22am AEST

Twenty-two years after China's bloody crackdown on pro-democracy protests, at least five people remain in jail for joining in the tumult.

For China's ruling Communist Party, the 1989 demonstrations that clogged Tiananmen Square in Beijing and spread to other cities remains a taboo topic.

They are all the taboo this year, as the government has launched a campaign to stamp out dissent after the uprisings in several Arab countries.

The anniversary of the suppression of the student-led movement falls on Saturday, and three men who joined in the protests - Jiang Yaqun, 75, Miao Deshun, 48, and Yang Pu, 47 - remain in Beijing's Yanqing prison, where sick inmates are held.

Two others - Chang Jingqiang, 43, and Li Yujun, 48, - are being held in another Beijing jail.

They were among a million students and workers who had gathered on Beijing's streets in 1989 to join pro-democracy demonstrations that ended before dawn on June 4 when tanks rolled into Tiananmen Square.

Researchers believe Jiang and Miao have been jailed for an unusually long time.

Originally given suspended death sentences, which were then commuted to life imprisonment before being commuted to roughly 20-year sentences, Jiang is due to be released in October 2013, while Miao's sentence is set to end on September 2018.

Jiang, who was convicted on charges of "counter-revolutionary sabotage", suffers from mild mental retardation, according to former prisoners who were in jail at the same time.

"He had no contact with any relatives when he was in prison," said Zhang Baoqun, 45, who was jailed for nearly 14 years for participating in the protests.

They spent their days making woollen clothes and gloves. Prisoners were frequently beaten by guards, he said.

Miao was convicted on an "arson" charge. Tanks and buses carrying troops were burned when Beijing residents took to the streets to try to block advancing soldiers.

"He was very stubborn, and that's why there was no sentence reduction," said former inmate Sun Liyong, who knew Miao from their time together in Beijing's No. 1 and No. 2 prisons.

"He kept on saying he wasn't guilty of anything."

Tiananmen shadow

Despite the efforts of dissidents and victims' families to keep the memories of Tiananmen alive, the official silence about that period means few young people know much about the pro-democracy protest.

Analysts and activists say hopes for a large-scale democracy movement like the one in 1989 look increasingly distant as China's ruling Communist Party, which brooks no dissent, spends more and more on police and domestic surveillance, reflecting their determination to avoid a repeat of the Tiananmen protests.

The government has never released a death toll of the 1989 crackdown.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei said on Thursday the Chinese people are "enjoying the best human rights situation in history," a statement heavily disputed by activists.

Dozens of dissidents and human rights advocates were detained or put under informal custody after online calls for a "Jasmine Revolution" in the style of the pro-democracy uprisings in the Middle East, which have so far succeeded in ousting two authoritarian leaders.

Memories of Tiananmen have receded with the passing of time and the rise of the Chinese economy, the world's second-largest.

But behind the outward prosperity looms a potentially divisive rich-poor divide in a country where 150 million people still live on just 50 cents a day.

Beijing is battling inflation that is near a 32-month high and local riots, protests and strikes - or what officials call "mass incidents".

Jeffrey Wasserstrom, a professor at the University of California, Irvine, who specialises in protests in modern Chinese history, says the government has done a good job of involving its people in the economic boom.

"But one thing that hasn't changed now from back then is that there's still widespread anger and disgust with official corruption and nepotism. That was the key driving force of the 1989 protests," he said.

Tiananmen protesters still jailed, decades on - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)
 
Thanks god that they did not succeed 32 years ago. Look at those morons who are now in overseas and who have never-ending in-fights over power and money.

If they did grab powers in China then, I just cannot imagine...

Again, thanks god that those morons did not succeed then.
 
Thanks god that they did not succeed 32 years ago. Look at those morons who are now in overseas and who have never-ending in-fights over power and money.

If they did grab powers in China then, I just cannot imagine...

Again, thanks god that those morons did not succeed then.

Aren't you overseas as well:confused:?
 
Aren't you overseas as well:confused:?

Mr. Roy, Sir,

Almost by definition all of the PRC posters here at the PDF are from the privileged class of the PRC. That is, they are all the children of party members and are benefiting personally from the PRC system, post-Tiananmen. So, no need for confusion! They are part of the Chinese oppressing clique, lock stock and barrel.....
 

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