Chinese security forces rounded up more government critics ahead of yesterday’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.
Stricter measures against dissidents are routine on the June 4 anniversary, but this year coincided with the most sweeping campaign in many years. Hundreds of activists, lawyers and bloggers have been questioned, detained or simply 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 (鮑彤), a former aide to the late Communist Party secretary Zhao Ziyang (趙紫陽), 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.
Photo: Reuters
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 yesterday.
Ding Zilin (丁子霖), 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 (陳子明), 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 Friday, 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 state-controlled media while Tiananmen Square in the heart of the capital was open, but 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 Tiananmen protests, which it branded a “counterrevolutionary riot.” Hundreds, possibly more, were killed when troops backed with tanks fought their way into the square into central Beijing on the night of June 3 to June 4.
In Hong Kong, which returned to Chinese rule in 1997, but maintains its own British-style legal system, the anniversary was to be marked by a candlelight vigil which usually draws tens of thousands of people.
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