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China rounds up activists on Tiananmen anniversary
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) June 4, 2012

China criticises US over Tiananmen call
Beijing (AFP) June 4, 2012 - China's foreign ministry on Monday expressed "strong dissatisfaction" over a US call for it to free all those still jailed for the 1989 Tiananmen Square demonstrations.

Foreign ministry spokesman Liu Weimin made the comment at a regular press briefing on Monday, the 23rd anniversary of the 1989 crackdown on demonstrators in which hundreds, possibly thousands, were killed.

More than two decades later, Beijing still considers the incident a "counter revolutionary rebellion" and has refused to acknowledge any wrongdoing or consider compensation for those killed.

The US State Department on Sunday called on Beijing to release those still serving sentences for their participation in the demonstrations and do more to protect the human rights of its citizens.

The call, on the eve of the highly sensitive anniversary, came amid heightened tensions between China and the United States after a major diplomatic row between over the blind Chinese dissident Chen Guangcheng.

China does not say how many people remain in custody over the 1989 protests, but the US-based rights group Dui Hua said last week it believed there were fewer than a dozen.

Any mention of the 1989 protests is banned in Chinese state media, and the subject is largely taboo in China.

The Tiananmen Mothers, a group of relatives of victims of the 1989 crackdown, issued an annual open letter to the government calling for the end of communist rule and a reassessment of the official verdict on the protests.

"So long as the Tiananmen Mothers exist, our struggle for justice will not cease," said the letter, signed by 121 members.


Chinese authorities have rounded up hundreds of activists in the capital Beijing, rights campaigners said on Monday, as they marked the 23rd anniversary of the Tiananmen Square crackdown.

The detentions came as Washington urged Beijing to free all those still jailed over the demonstrations on June 4, 1989, when hundreds, if not thousands, of peaceful protesters were shot and killed by soldiers.

The anniversary of the brutal army action in the heart of Beijing is always hugely sensitive, but particularly so this year ahead of a once-a-decade handover of power marred by fierce in-fighting in the ruling Communist Party.

"They brought in a lot of buses and were rounding up petitioners at the Beijing South rail station on Saturday night," Zhou Jinxia, a petitioner from northeast China's Liaoning province told AFP.

"There were between 600 to 1,000 petitioners from all over China. We were processed, we had to register and then they started sending people back to their home towns."

Police made it clear that the round up of petitioners -- people who gather at central government offices in Beijing to seek redress for rights violations in their localities -- was to prevent them from protesting on June 4, she said.

China still considers the June 4 demonstrations a "counter-revolutionary rebellion" and has refused to acknowledge any wrongdoing or consider compensation for those killed, more than two decades later.

The government 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.

Any mention of the 1989 protests is banned in Chinese state media, and the subject is largely taboo in China. Searches on China's popular social media sites for June 4, the number 23 and the word "candle" were blocked on Monday.

Despite the heightened security, numerous public events have been held around the nation to commemorate the "Tiananmen massacre" and demand democratic reforms.

More than 80 rights campaigners met in a Beijing square on Saturday, carrying banners and shouting slogans calling for a reassessment of the 1989 protests.

"We shouted 'down with corruption', and 'protect our rights'," Wang Yongfeng, a Shanghai activist, who attended the protest, told AFP.

"So many people were killed on June 4, we think the government should fully account for what happened."

Photographs of the Saturday protest posted online showed demonstrators with large placards that said "remember our struggle for democracy, freedom and rights as well as those heroes who met tragedy."

A similar protest occurred in a park in southeast China's Guiyang city last week, with police subsequently taking into custody at least four of the organisers of the event, the Chinese Human Rights Defenders group said on its website.

In Beijing, veteran dissident Hu Jia said on his microblog that, as in previous years on the Tiananmen anniversary, police had stepped up security around the homes of numerous political activists and social critics.

Rights activists and lawyers said police had also contacted them and warned against participating in activities marking the crackdown.

Another rights defender, Yu Xiaomei from eastern Jiangsu province, told AFP by telephone she had been followed by three men when she left her home on Monday.

"I recognised one of them. He had beaten me and detained me two years ago. I ran away, I don't dare go out onto the street today," she said.

The only open commemoration of the crackdown to be allowed on Chinese soil will take place in Hong Kong, a Chinese territory that enjoys freedoms not allowed in the mainland.

Organisers say they expect more than 150,000 people to join a candlelight vigil to mark the anniversary.

burs-cc/mtp

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US pushes China on Tiananmen anniversary
Washington (AFP) June 3, 2012 - The United States urged China to free all those still jailed over the 1989 Tiananmen Square demonstrations, on the eve of Monday's 23rd anniversary of the brutal crackdown on the protests.

State Department deputy spokesman Mark Toner said Sunday the United States called on Beijing to do more to protect the human rights of its citizens -- a comment that could touch a raw nerve in Beijing on the sensitive anniversary.

The United States "joins the international community in remembering the tragic loss of innocent lives" in the "violent suppression" of the mass pro-democracy protests in the heart of Beijing, Toner said in a statement.

"We encourage the Chinese government to release all those still serving sentences for their participation in the demonstrations; to provide a full public accounting of those killed, detained or missing; and to end the continued harassment of demonstration participants and their families."

Hundreds, perhaps thousands, are believed to have died when the government sent in tanks and soldiers to clear Tiananmen Square on the night of June 3-4, 1989, violently crushing six weeks of pro-democracy protests.

More than two decades later, Beijing still considers the incident a "counter revolutionary rebellion" and has refused to acknowledge any wrongdoing or consider compensation for those killed.

The US statement made no specific mention of accounts from rights campaigners that Chinese police beat and detained political activists Sunday as they marked the anniversary of the crackdown by the People's Liberation Army.

Officers used violence against activists in the southeast province of Fujian and detained them, while more than 30 people who came to Beijing "to petition" were held and then forced to return home, the campaigners reported.

But on the heels of a major diplomatic row over blind Chinese dissident Chen Guangcheng, who is now living in the United States after fleeing house arrest, Washington urged Beijing to stop harassing human rights activists.

"We renew our call for China to protect the universal human rights of all its citizens; release those who have been wrongfully detained, prosecuted, incarcerated, forcibly disappeared, or placed under house arrest; and end the ongoing harassment of human rights activists and their families," Toner said.

In Beijing, veteran dissident Hu Jia said on his microblog that, as in previous years on the Tiananmen anniversary, police had stepped up security around the homes of numerous political activists and social critics.

Rights activists and lawyers said police had also contacted them and warned against participating in activities marking the crackdown.

Any mention of the 1989 protests is banned in Chinese state media, and the subject is largely taboo in China.

The overseas dissident website www.molihua.org had in recent days urged those opposed to the crackdown to dress in black and "stroll" in public places throughout China on June 3-4.

The call, which spread via numerous microblogs, was similar to posts last year urging Chinese to hold protests akin to those that spread through the Arab world.

The Tiananmen Mothers, a group of relatives of victims of the 1989 crackdown, issued an annual open letter to the government calling for the end of communist rule and a reassessment of the official verdict on the protests.

"So long as the Tiananmen Mothers exist, our struggle for justice will not cease," said the letter, signed by 121 members.

The only open commemoration of the crackdown to be allowed on Chinese soil will take place in Hong Kong, a Chinese territory that enjoys freedoms not allowed in the mainland.



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