June 4, 2009

Tiananmen Square 20th Anniversary! It Appears China Has NOT Changed! Communism Seeks To SILENCE Opposition and Control Thought! Capitalist My Ass!

The Washington Post
China Silent on Tienanmen Square Anniversary
written by By Ariana Eunjung Cha and K.C. Ng
Thursday, June 4, 2009; 3:09 PM

BEIJING, June 4 -- Mainland China remained quiet on the 20th anniversary of the bloody Tiananmen Square crackdown Thursday, while tens of thousands of people staged a protest in Hong Kong.

Beijing, the capital, was on virtual lockdown. Key foreign news Web sites were blocked, dissidents were placed under house arrest, and police blanketed the vast square where a still-undetermined number of pro-democracy activists were killed in a violent clash with the military June 4, 1989. Journalists were kept away from the scene.

Foreign governments, including the United States, Germany and Taiwan, called on Beijing this week to revisit its policy of ignoring the crackdown. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said in a statement Wednesday that China "should examine openly the darker events of its past and provide a public accounting of those killed, detained or missing, both to learn and to heal."

German Chancellor Angela Merkel commented in a speech Thursday that "June 4, 1989 . . . marked a terrible sacrifice in Tiananmen Square." Taiwanese President Ma Ying-jeou, who has pushed for closer ties with China, said: "This painful chapter in history must be faced. Pretending it never happened is not an option."

Over the years, Beijing has taken a two-pronged approach to the massacre. Domestically, the incident is ignored in history books, and discussion about it is banned to the point that many young people know nothing of what happened. In arguments directed to the international community, Beijing has said the crackdown was necessary to ensure social stability, which it says was a precondition for the market-driven changes that have since transformed China into the world's third-largest economy.

On Thursday, Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang limited his remarks to a sentence: "On the political incident that took place in the 1980s, the party and the government have already reached a conclusion."

In the weeks before the anniversary, authorities erased most traces of the massacre from the capital. Twitter and other Internet services people could have used to coordinate gatherings were blocked, as were news Web sites such as CNN and the BBC. Foreign newspapers and magazines that had been covering commemorative protests in Hong Kong were delivered with pages ripped out. Writers, activists and even mothers of victims were put under surveillance or house arrest.

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