“For the dead and the living, we must bear witness...” Elie Weisel
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Photo © Hong Kong Alliance
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Twenty five years ago tonight it began.
The Pro-Democracy Movement
that had taken to the streets in April of 1989 was violently crushed by the Chinese communist dictatorship beginning on the evening of June 3, 1989. By dawn on June 4, 1989 scores of demonstrators
had been shot and killed or run over and crushed by tanks of the so-called People's Liberation Army.
Thousands more would be rounded up, arrested and sentenced to prison in show trials. As many
as a thousand received death sentences that were carried out.
The response of the West and the United States at the forefront? Pro forma protests to satisfy the
outrage of their citizens while
secretly meeting with the men who had ordered the mass killing to let them know that what was important was their economic relationship.
Twenty five years later in the days
leading up to the anniversary scores of activists have been
persecuted, rounded up and detained. The Chinese communist regime has
cranked up its censorship apparatus blocking
Google services and blocking websites such as the Wall Street Journal.
Amnesty International on June 2, 2014
reported on the arrest of the Chinese born Australian artist, Guo Jian, age 52, shortly after the publication of an interview he gave to the
Financial Times featuring his latest installation, "The Square", which consists of a model of Beijing's Tiananmen Square covered in 160 kilograms of ground pork.
What can we do in the light of this collusion between the powerful and the morally bankrupt? We can refuse to forget.
We can become informed. Refuse to go along with the Chinese
regime's enforced amnesia. Document repression and denounce efforts to silence what happened. We can listen,
remember and continue to demand that the truth of what happened be made known and that justice be provided for the victims and their families.
At least one political prisoner
identified by the BBC who was arrested during the Tiananmen Square Crackdown remains in prison. His name is
Miao Deshun, a humble worker without political or international connections, and he
has been imprisoned for 25 years for his role in the protests. There may be more.
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Wu Guofeng pictured in Tiananmen Square (TOM PHILLIPS) |
The Daily Telegraph reported on
20-year-old student Wu Guofeng who on the night of June 3, 1989
grabbed his camera and took off in his bike in a south east direction to where the crackdown was unfolding. At 3am on June 4 a fellow student returned to the university dormitory bearing terrible news: Wu Guofeng was dead. He had been
shot in the head, shoulder and chest by the advancing troops, and then deliberately
skewered through the belly with a bayonet. Despite threats and official intimidation his family has refused to be silenced.
Human Rights in China provides
an excellent brief chronology of the Democracy Movement beginning on April 15, 1989 explaining how the protests began and developed until the very end. Below is an excerpt of the crackdown on June 3, 1989 and events across the rest of June:
June 3:
Violent confrontations begin: In the afternoon, violent clashes occur between soldiers and Beijing residents. In the evening, PLA troops force their way into the capital and converge on Tiananmen Square. An unknown number of Beijing citizens die, succumbing to gun shots—sometimes at point blank—or crushed by tanks and armored personnel carriers. In angry retaliation, civilians throw stones at the soldiers, who shoot back. Some soldiers are attacked and beaten up. Buses and cars are set on fire.
June 4:
1:00 a.m. The troops have blocked off all approaches to Tiananmen Square. Various people who witnessed the killings of civilians report to the BWAF and to the students’ Command Headquarters, urging them to withdraw.
2:00 a.m. The first troop transport trucks enter the square. Chai Ling and Li Lu call on those remaining on the square to gather around the Monument to the People’s Heroes.
3:00 a.m. Hou Dejian and Zhou Duo negotiate with army officials to give the students time to vacate the square. Withdrawal will be unconditional, officials reply, adding that it must take place before daybreak. They indicate the southeast as the safest way to exit.
4:00 a.m. On the square the lights go off. The statue of the Goddess of Democracy is toppled by a tank.
4:30 a.m. The tanks and the troops stationed in the north corner of the Square begin to move forward. Students vote and eventually agree to leave. The soldiers shoot out the students’ loud speakers. Led by the Command Headquarters, the students walk away from the Monument to the People’s Heroes toward the southeast part of the square. A row of armored vehicles moves slowly toward the monument. Other troops arrive from the west, squeezing the crowd. As the students leave, army tanks crush tents on their way. The student guards are the last to leave, with soldiers about 18 feet behind them firing warning shots.
5:00 a.m. As the students pass Qianmen, residents line the streets and applaud. The army throws tear gas and shoots at students and citizens near the square and in other areas of the capital. Some people are crushed under tanks. The number of victims is not known.
6:20 a.m. Tanks crush retreating students.
June 5
Tank Man appears: A lone man stops a tank convoy heading for Tiananmen Square.
June 9
A “counterrevolutionary rebellion”: In a speech, Deng Xiaoping states that the government has suppressed a “counterrevolutionary rebellion . . . determined by the international and domestic climate” where the “dregs of society” had sought to “establish a bourgeois republic entirely dependent on the West.”
June 13
Most wanted: The Chinese authorities broadcast the list of the 21 most wanted student leaders.
June 15
Death sentences imposed: A court in Shanghai sentences three residents to death for involvement in the protests. Soon after, people in Beijing, Shandong, Sichuan, Hebei, and Hubei are sentenced to death. Throughout the country, there are tens of thousands of detentions and arrests. Approximately one thousand people are executed, and many others are investigated and harassed.
Solidarity Actions in Rememberance of Tiananmen crackdown 2014
Around the world activities have already been held and others are being planned for June 3rd and June 4, 2014. Below are just a few. There are many more.
International
Initiatives for China, an independent non-governmental organization, has proclaimed June 4, 2014 as a
Global Prayer Day for China obtaining
the support of Archbishop Desmond Tutu and
Former Taiwanese President Lee Tenghui. A suggested prayer is available
online here.
Hong Kong
Candlelight vigils and calls to pray for China have been issued by the Chinese diaspora. In Hong Kong
more than two thousand turned out to a vigil on June 1, 2014 and 150,000 are
expected to turn out for a candle light vigil in Victoria Park on June 4, 2014.
London, UK
Candlelit Vigil organized by
the Tibet Society on Wednesday 4 June, 7pm - 10pm. All welcome outside the Chinese Embassy 49-59 Portland Place, London W1B 1JL I map nearest tubes: Great Portland Street, Regents Park or Oxford Circus A candlelit vigil to remember all those who died, were injured or imprisoned when Chinese armed forces stormed Tiananmen Square on 4 June 1989. More information
available here.
Washington, D.C.
In Washington D.C., the Chinese dissident and former prisoner of conscience Harry Wu at the Laogai Research Foundation is inviting people of good will to join in remembering the victims of the June 4th, 1989 turmoil at 1734 20th St., Washington D.C., 20009 today, June 3rd and tomorrow June 4, 2014 from 4-6:30pm. The event starts at 4pm every afternoon where Tiananmen Square Massacre Photos will be exhibited and beginning at 5pm a film screening of the PBS Frontline Documentary
The Tank Man that will continue until 6:30pm. All you have to do to attend is send an email with the subject “RSVP” to
museum@laogai.org to RSVP.
New York City, NY
Events to observe the 25th anniversary of the 1989 Tiananmen Massacre.
June 3, Tuesday: 11 am-12 pm: Protest in front of the Chinese Consulate-general in New York
1pm: Conference on Tiananmen, 7/F, Hilton Hotel, 135-20 39th Ave.,Flushing, NYC, 11354.
6 pm - 9 pm: Candlelight vigil in Time Square (7th Avenue & West 39th Street)
Contact: Wang Juntao: 347-705-3789
Miami, FL
In Miami the Free Cuba Foundation
has launched a call to action. Based on response a location will be selected.
One last action that will only take you two minutes. Please
sign this petition of the Tibetan National Congress to rename the street housing the Chinese Embassy in Washington DC after the imprisoned Nobel Laureate
Liu Xiaobo.