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by Staff Writers Taipei (AFP) June 03, 2014
Taiwan on Tuesday urged China to face up to history and protect the rights of dissidents on the eve of the 25th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square crackdown. "The unfortunate history of the 'June 4 incident' cannot be forgotten and only by facing history can (China) heal the wounds, transform and move forward," said the Mainland Affairs Council, Taiwan's top policy-making body on China. "The mainland authorities should show sincerity to be responsible and to reconcile, and treat the 'June 4' victims and their families well," it said in its annual statement marking the incident. The council also called on Beijing to respect and tolerate different opinions in society and protect the human rights of its dissident and activists. Taiwan's government has repeatedly urged China to learns lessons from the 1989 crackdown on pro-democracy protesters, during which troops killed hundreds of unarmed civilians -- by some estimates more than 1,000. Beijing still considers the Tiananmen incident a "counter-revolutionary rebellion" and has refused to acknowledge any wrongdoing or consider compensation for those killed. "There is not much new in this year's statement but at least Taiwan is showing its position and concerns on the June 4 incident," said George Tsai, a political analyst at the Taipei-based Chinese Culture University. "Its statement is mild as Taiwan has to consider the broader picture of improving cross-strait ties." Relations have improved markedly since President Ma Ying-jeou took office in 2008 on a Beijing-friendly platform. He was re-elected in 2012 for a final four-year term. Public surveys in Taiwan have indicated that despite ever closer economic ties with the mainland, an increasing number of Taiwanese oppose reunification -- citing authoritarian rule in China as a key reason. Anti-China sentiment mounted in Taiwan earlier this year when a group of young protesters occupied parliament in protest at a controversial services trade pact with China. Opponents see the deal as damaging Taiwan's economy and leaving it vulnerable to political pressure from China, which still claims sovereignty over the island despite their split in 1949 after a civil war.
Tiananmen anniversary: US urges China to free activists At a time of growing distrust between the world's two largest economies, the United States repeated calls for Beijing to allow greater political freedoms as the communist government steps up arrests and censorship. "We've very clearly called on the Chinese authorities to release all the activists, journalists and lawyers who have been detained ahead of the 25th anniversary," State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf told reporters. "I think it's time to allow some more space, quite frankly, for discussion in their own country, particularly around this kind of anniversary," she added. China has tried hard to quash any public memories of the June 3-4, 1989 crackdown, when soldiers killed hundreds of unarmed civilians -- and by some estimates, more than 1,000 -- to crush a movement by pro-democracy students. Police visibly stepped up their presence in Beijing to prevent any public commemoration and detained dozens of activists. A monitoring service said that several Google sites had been blocked in the world's most populous nation. The United States regularly raises human rights concerns with China, although critics say that US efforts have largely been symbolic as Washington resumed normal trade relations with Beijing soon after the Tiananmen crackdown. But relations between the two countries have grown tense in recent months, with the United States raising the stakes by indicting five Chinese officers for alleged cyber-espionage. - 'A government without a future' - Chen Guangcheng, one of China's most prominent activists who dramatically escaped from house arrest in 2012 for the safety of the US embassy, urged commemorations of the Tiananmen Square movement as he addressed a think tank in Washington. Speaking in English in public for the first time, the blind-since-birth self-taught lawyer hailed Hong Kong -- which is part of China but autonomous -- for its annual June 4 vigils and for recently opening the first museum on the Tiananmen crackdown. "Every candlelight vigil makes the perpetrators shudder in fear. It gives people courage to think and speak aloud again," Chen said, speaking forcefully in clear but careful English as he read his speech in Braille at the conservative American Enterprise Institute. "A government that cannot face its own history is a government without a future," Chen said, asking how a government that disrespects its citizens can be expected to "treat other countries any better." Chen said he was 17 years old at the time of the Tiananmen crackdown and was not enrolled in school due to his blindness. But Chen said he sympathized as he listened to the radio and would have joined the protests if he were a student. Chen rose to prominence by exposing forced abortions in eastern Shandong province as authorities enforced China's one-child policy. He spent four years in prison until 2010 and was then put under house arrest, where he said that he and his wife -- who appeared with him in Washington -- were subjected to severe beatings. Chen, who was allowed to move to the United States after high-level negotiations, urged Western countries to keep raising human rights and "stop receiving the June 4 incident's criminals as your honored guests." "Don't let those who crush human rights enter your free, democratic countries. Deny them the warmth of your handshake and the warmth of your smile."
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