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Architecture- Peking
Tiananmen Square |
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Tiananmen Square, site of the Tiananmen
Square protests of May 4, 1919, 1976, and 1989 |
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Outdoor space |
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Overview of the Tiananmen Square |
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Iconic image of the Tiananmen Square from the May Fourth movement
of 1919 and the Goddess of Democracy from the 1989 student protests. |
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Zhengyangmen gate |
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The man with the shopping bags, 1989. |
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Tiananmen Square is the large plaza near the center of Beijing, China,
named after the Tiananmen (literally, Gate of Heavenly Peace) which sits
to its north, separating it from the Forbidden City. It has great
cultural significance as a symbol because it was the site of several key
events in Chinese history (See below: Events). Outside of China, the
square is best known for the Tiananmen Square Massacre.
The square is 880 metres south to north and 500 metres east to
west, a total area of 440,000 square meters, which makes it the largest
open-urban square in the world.
Background
The Tiananmen was built in 1417 in the Ming Dynasty. In 1699
(early Qing Dynasty), the Tiananmen was renovated and renamed to its
present form. During the Ming and Qing eras, there was no public square
at Tiananmen, and instead the area was filled with offices for imperial
ministries. These were badly damaged during the Boxer Rebellion and the
area was cleared to produce the beginning of Tiananmen Square.
Near the centre of today's square, close to the site of the Mao
Zedong Mausoleum, once stood one of the most important gates of Beijing.
This gate was known as the "Great Ming Gate" (???) during the Ming
Dynasty, "Great Qing Gate" (???) during the Qing Dynasty, and "Gate of
China" (???) during the Republic of China era. Unlike the other gates in
Beijing, such as the Tiananmen and the Qianmen, this was a purely
ceremonial gateway, with three arches but no ramparts, similar in style
to the ceremonial gateways found in the Ming Dynasty Tombs. This gate
had a special status as the "Gate of the Nation", as can be seen from
its successive names. It normally remained closed, except when the
Emperor passed through. Commoner traffic were diverted to two side gates
at the western and eastern ends of today's square, respectively. Because
of this diversion in traffic, a busy marketplace, called Chessgrid
Streets (???) developed in the small, fenced square to the south of this
gate.
In the early 1950s, China Gate (as it was then known) was
demolished along with the Chessgrid Streets to the south, completing the
expansion of Tiananmen Square to (approximately) its current size.
Features
The Tian'anmen Square in BeijingEnlarged in 1949 to the current
size, its flatness is broken only by the 38 metre high Monument to the
People's Heroes and the Mausoleum of Mao Zedong. The square lies between
two ancient, massive gates: the Tian'anmen to the north and the
Zhengyangmen, better known as Qianmen (Simplified Chinese: ??;
Traditional Chinese: ??; pinyin: Qiánmén; literally "Front Gate") to the
south. Along the west side of the Square is the Great Hall of the
People. Along the east side is the National Museum of China. Chang'an
Avenue, which is used for parades, lies between the Tian'anmen and the
Square. Trees line the east and west edges of the Square, but the square
itself is open, with neither trees nor benches.
The Square is lit with huge lampposts which also sport video
cameras[citation needed]. It is heavily monitored by uniformed and plain
clothes policemen.
Events
Tiananmen Square has been the site of a number of political
events such as the proclamation of the People's Republic of China by Mao
Zedong in October 1, 1949 and for mass rallies during the Cultural
Revolution. It has also been the site of a number of protest movements,
most notably the May Fourth Movement of 1919 for science and democracy,
protests in 1976 after the death of Zhou Enlai, and the Tiananmen Square
protests of 1989.
The protests of 1989 resulted in the killing of Chinese
protestors in the streets to the west of the square and adjacent areas.
Some Western reporters who were on the square during the unfolding
events reported that they saw no one actually die on the square itself,
though did see bloodied people but could not confirm whether they were
either dead or injured (Graham Earnshaw and Columbia Journal Review).
However, Chinese expatriates who left the country after the killings
said that the total numbers of deaths ended up being in the thousands.
This was a combination of the hundreds killed on the spot and the
"miniature" purge that followed.
Protests
The Tiananmen Square protests of 1989, also known as the
Tiananmen Square Massacre, June 4th Incident, or the Political Turmoil
between Spring and Summer of 1989 by the government of the People's
Republic of China, were a series of demonstrations led by students,
intellectuals and labour activists in the People's Republic of China
between April 15, 1989 and June 4, 1989. The demonstrations centred on
Tiananmen Square in Beijing, but large scale protests also occurred in
cities throughout China, such as in Shanghai.
In Beijing, the resulting crackdown on the protestors by the PRC
government left many civilians dead, the figure ranging from 200–300
(PRC government figures), to 2,000–3,000 (Chinese student associations
and Chinese Red Cross), although the PRC government asserts and most
independent observers agree that these deaths were not in the square
itself but rather in the streets leading to the square. [1]
The protestors came from disparate groups, ranging from
intellectuals who believed the Communist Party of China-led government
was too corrupt and repressive, to urban workers who believed Chinese
economic reform had gone too far and that the resulting rampant
inflation and widespread unemployment was threatening their livelihoods.
After the protestors defied government calls to disperse, a split
emerged within the Communist Party of China on how to respond to the
protestors. Out of the party turmoil, a hardline faction emerged and the
decision was made to quell the protests, rather than to heed their
demands.
On May 20, the government declared martial law and, on the night
of June 3 and the early morning of June 4, army tanks and infantry were
sent into Tiananmen Square to crush the protest and disperse the
protestors. Estimates of civilian deaths vary: 23 (Communist Party of
China), 400–800 (Central Intelligence Agency), 2600 (Chinese Red Cross).
Injuries are generally held to have numbered from 7,000 to 10,000.
Following the violence, the government conducted widespread arrests to
suppress the remaining supporters of the movement, banned the foreign
press and strictly controlled coverage of the events in the PRC press.
The violent suppression of the Tiananmen Square protest caused
widespread international condemnation of the PRC government.[3]
The incident is named after the location of the movement in
Tiananmen Square, Beijing. Some historians also call it "the Beijing
massacre".
In the Chinese language, the incident is most commonly known as
the June Fourth Movement (Simplified Chinese: ????; Traditional Chinese:
????) or June Fourth Event (Chinese: ????). The former is in conformity
with the other two great protest actions that occurred on Tiananmen
Square: the May Fourth Movement of 1919, and the April Fifth Movement of
1976. In some contexts, "June Fourth Movement" refers more generally to
all the student and civil unrest which occurred throughout China, in
addition to the events in Beijing and specifically Tiananmen Square.
Background
Since 1978, Deng Xiaoping had led a series of economic and
political reforms which had led to the gradual implementation of a
market economy and some political liberalization that relaxed the system
set up by Mao Zedong. By early 1989, these economic and political
reforms had led two groups of people to become dissatisfied with the
government.
The first group included students and intellectuals, who believed
that the reforms had not gone far enough and that China needed to reform
its political systems, since the economic reforms had only affected
farmers and factory workers; the incomes of intellectuals lagged far
behind those who had benefited from reform policies. They were concerned
about the social and political controls that the Communist Party of
China still had. In addition, this group saw the political
liberalization that had been undertaken in the name of glasnost by
Mikhail Gorbachev. The second group were those, including urban
industrial workers, who believed that the social and political reforms
had gone too far. The loosening of economic control had begun to cause
inflation and unemployment, which threatened their livelihood.

An anonymous drawing posted in a pedestrian walkway underneath
Chang An Avenue caricatures Deng Xiaoping (seated behind the lectern) as
an old Chinese emperor.In 1989, the primary supporters of the government
were rural peasants who had seen their incomes increase considerably
during the 1980s as a result of the Party's reforms.[citation needed]
However, this support was limited in usefulness because rural peasants
were distributed across the countryside. In contrast to urban dwellers
who were organized into schools and work units, peasant supporters of
the government remained largely unorganized and difficult to mobilize.
The Tiananmen Square protests in 1989 were in large measure
sparked by the death of former Secretary General Hu Yaobang. Hu
Yaobang's "resignation" from the position of Secretary General of the
CPC had been announced on January 16, 1987. His forthright calls for
"rapid reform and his almost open contempt of Maoist excesses" had made
him a suitable scapegoat in the eyes of Deng Xiaoping and others, after
the pro-democracy student protests of 1986–1987 (Spence 1999, 685).
Included in his resignation was also a "humiliating self-criticism",
which he was forced to issue by the Central Committee of the Communist
Party. Hu Yaobang's sudden death, due to heart attack, on April 15, 1989
provided a perfect opportunity for the students to gather once again,
not only to mourn the deceased Secretary General, but also to have their
voices heard in "demanding a reversal of the verdict against him" and
bringing renewed attention to the important issues of the 1986–1987
pro-democracy protests and possibly also to those of the Democracy Wall
protests in 1978–1979 (Spence 1999, 697).
Protests begin
Protests started out on a
small scale, in the form of mourning for Hu Yaobang and demands that the
party revise their official view of him. The protests gained momentum
after news of confrontation between students and police spread; the
belief by students that the Chinese media was distorting the nature of
their activities also led to increased support. At Hu's funeral, a large
group of students gathered at Tiananmen Square and requested, but
failed, to meet premier Li Peng, widely regarded to be Hu's political
rival. Thus students called for a strike in universities in Beijing. On
April 26, an editorial in People's Daily, following an internal speech
made by Deng Xiaoping, accused the students of plotting civil unrest.
The statement enraged the students, and on April 29 about 50,000
students assembled on the streets of Beijing, disregarding the warning
of a crackdown made by authorities and demanded that the government
revoke the statement.
In Beijing, a majority of students from the city's numerous
colleges and universities participated with support of their instructors
and other intellectuals. The students rejected official Communist
Party-controlled student associations and set up their own autonomous
associations. The students viewed themselves as Chinese patriots, as the
heirs of the May Fourth Movement for "science and democracy" of 1919.
The protests also evoked memories of the Tiananmen Square protests of
1976 which had eventually led to the ousting of the Gang of Four. From
its origins as a memorial to Hu Yaobang, who was seen by the students as
an advocate of democracy, the students' activity gradually developed
over the course of their demonstration from protests against corruption
into demands for freedom of the press and an end to, or the reform of
the rule of the PRC by the Communist Party of China and Deng Xiaoping,
the de facto paramount Chinese leader. Partially successful attempts
were made to reach out and network with students in other cities and
with workers.
Although the initial protests were made by students and
intellectuals who believed that the Deng Xiaoping reforms had not gone
far enough and China needed to reform its political systems, they soon
attracted the support of urban workers who believed that the reforms had
gone too far. This occurred because the leaders of the protests focused
on the issue of corruption, which united both groups, and because the
students were able to invoke Chinese archetypes of the selfless
intellectual who spoke truth to power.
Unlike the Tiananmen protests of 1987, which consisted mainly of
students and intellectuals, the protests in 1989 commanded widespread
support from the urban workers who were alarmed by growing inflation and
corruption. In Beijing, they were supported by a large number of people.
Similar numbers were found in major cities throughout mainland China
such as Urumqi, Shanghai and Chongqing; and later in Hong Kong, Taiwan
and Chinese communities in North America and Europe.
Protests escalate
"The Goddess of Democracy" carved by students from the Central
Academy of Fine Arts and erected in the Square during the protest.On May
4, approximately 100,000 students and workers marched in Beijing making
demands for free media reform and a formal dialogue between the
authorities and student-elected representatives. The government rejected
the proposed dialogue, only agreeing to talk to members of appointed
student organizations. On May 13, two days prior to the
highly-publicized state visit by the reform-minded Soviet leader Mikhail
Gorbachev, huge groups of students occupied Tiananmen Square and started
a hunger strike, insisting the government withdraw the accusation made
in the People's Daily editorial and begin talks with the designated
student representatives. Hundreds of students went on hunger strikes and
were supported by hundreds of thousands of protesting students and part
of the population of Beijing, for one week.
Protests and strikes began at many colleges in other cities, with
many students traveling to Beijing to join the demonstration. Generally,
the demonstration at Tiananmen Square was well-ordered, with daily
marches of students from various Beijing area colleges displaying their
solidarity with the boycott of college classes and with the developing
demands of the protest. The students sang "The Internationale," the
world socialist anthem, on their way to and within the square.[4] The
students even showed a surprising gesture of respect to the government
by helping police arrest three men from Hunan Province who had thrown
ink on the large portrait of Mao that hangs from Tiananmen, just north
of the square.[5] One of these men, Yu Dongyue, remained in prison until
February 2006. Years of torture and bouts of solitary confinement left
Yu mentally ill and barely recognisable to his friends and family.[6] Lu
Decheng, another of the three who defaced Mao's portrait with paint, was
sentenced to life in prison. Despite being paroled in 1998, Lu remained
a pariah in his own country, constantly hounded by China's secret
police. In November 2004 Lu slipped out of China across the Burmese
border, and made his way to Thailand. Months later Chinese agents nabbed
Lu and turned him over to the Thai immigration police, intending to have
him extradited back to China for more jail time. In April 2006 Lu
legally escaped to Canada with a permanent resident visa granted for
political asylum.[7]
The students ultimately decided that in order to sustain their
movement and impede any loss of momentum a hunger strike would need to
be enacted. The students' decision to undertake the hunger strike was a
defining moment in their movement. The hunger strike began in May 1989
and grew to include "more than one thousand persons" (Liu 1994, 315).
The hunger strike brought widespread support for the students and "the
ordinary people of Beijing rallied to protect the hunger
strikers...because the act of refusing sustenance and courting
government reprisals convinced onlookers that the students were not just
seeking personal gains but (were) sacrificing themselves for the Chinese
people as a whole" (Calhoun 1994, 113).
Partially successful attempts were made to negotiate with the PRC
government, who were located nearby in Zhongnanhai, the Communist Party
headquarters and leadership compound. Because of the visit of Mikhail
Gorbachev, foreign media were present in mainland China in large
numbers. Their coverage of the protests was extensive and generally
favorable towards the protesters, but pessimistic that they would attain
their goals. Toward the end of the demonstration, on May 30, a statue of
the Goddess of Democracy was erected in the Square and came to symbolize
the protest to television viewers worldwide.
The Standing Committee of the Politburo, along with the party
elders (retired but still-influential former officials of the government
and Party), were, at first, hopeful that the demonstrations would be
short-lived or that cosmetic reforms and investigations would satisfy
the protesters. They wished to avoid violence if possible, and relied at
first on their far-reaching Party apparatus in attempts to persuade the
students to abandon the protest and return to their studies. One barrier
to effective action was that the leadership itself supported many of the
demands of the students, especially the concern with corruption.
However, one large problem was that the protests contained many people
with varying agendas, and hence it was unclear with whom the government
could negotiate, and what the demands of the protesters were. The
confusion and indecision among the protesters was also mirrored by
confusion and indecision within the government. The official media
mirrored this indecision as headlines in the People's Daily alternated
between sympathy with the demonstrators and denouncing them.
Among the top leadership, General Secretary Zhao Ziyang was
strongly in favour of a soft approach to the demonstrations while Li
Peng was seen to argue in favour of a crackdown. Ultimately, the
decision to crack down on the demonstrations was made by a group of
Party elders who saw abandonment of single-party rule as a return of the
chaos of the Cultural Revolution. Although most of these people had no
official position, they were able to control the military. Deng Xiaoping
was chairman of the Central Military Commission and was able to declare
martial law; Yang Shangkun was President of the People's Republic of
China, which, although a symbolic position under the 1982 Constitution,
was legally the commander-in-chief of the armed forces. The Party elders
believed that lengthy demonstrations were a threat to the stability of
the country. The demonstrators were seen as tools of advocates of
"bourgeois liberalism" who were pulling the strings behind the scenes,
as well as tools of elements within the party who wished to further
their personal ambitions.
The crackdown
Although the government declared martial law on May 20, the
military's entry into Beijing was blocked by throngs of protesters, and
the army was eventually ordered to withdraw. Meanwhile, the
demonstrations continued. The hunger strike was approaching the end of
the third week, and the government resolved to end the matter before
deaths occurred. After deliberation among Communist party leaders, the
use of military force to resolve the crisis was ordered, and Zhao Ziyang
was ousted from political leadership as a result of his support for the
student demonstrators. The Communist Party then decided to stop the
situation before it escalated further.
Tiananmen Square as seen from the Tian'an gate in 2004.Soldiers
and tanks from the 27th and 28th Armies of the People's Liberation Army
were sent to take control of the city. The 27th Army was led by a
commander related to Yang Shangkun. In a press conference, President
Bush announced sanctions on Communist China (following calls to action
from members of congress such as US Senator Jesse Helms). The President
suggested that intelligence he had received indicated some disunity in
China's military ranks, and even the possibility of clashes within the
military during those days. Intelligence reports also indicated that
27th and 28th units were brought in from outside provinces because the
local PLA were considered to be sympathetic to the protest and the
people of the city. Reporters described elements of the 27th as having
been most responsible for civilian deaths. After the attack on the
square, the 27th reportedly established defensive positions in Beijing -
not of the sort designed to counter a civilian uprising, but as if to
defend against attacks by other military units. The locally-stationed
38th Army, on the other hand, was reportedly sympathetic to the
uprising. They were supplied no ammunition, and were said to be torching
their own vehicles as they abandoned them to join the protests.
[citation needed]
Entry of the troops into the city was actively opposed by many
citizens of Beijing. Protesters burned public buses and used them as
roadblocks to stop the military's progress. The battle continued on the
streets surrounding the Square, with protesters repeatedly advancing
toward the People's Liberation Army (PLA) and constructing barricades
with vehicles, while the PLA attempted to clear the streets using tear
gas. Many injured citizens were saved by rickshaw drivers who ventured
into the no-man's-land between the soldiers and crowds and carried the
wounded off to hospitals. After the attack on the square, live
television coverage showed many people wearing black armbands in protest
of the government's action, crowding various boulevards or congregating
by burnt out and smoking barricades. Meanwhile, the PLA systematically
established checkpoints around the city, chasing after protesters and
blocking off the university district.
Within the Square itself, there was apparently a debate between
those who wished to withdraw peacefully (including Han Dongfang), and
those who wished to stand within the square (such as Chai Ling). The
assault on the square began at 5:40AM on June 4, as armored personnel
carriers (APCs) and armed troops with fixed bayonets approached from
various positions. These APCs rolled on up the roads, firing ahead and
off to the sides, perhaps killing or wounding their own soldiers in the
process. An unnamed BBC reporter spoke of "indiscriminate fire" within
the square. Students who sought refuge in buses were pulled out by
groups of soldiers and beaten with heavy sticks. Even students
attempting to leave the square were beset by soldiers and beaten.
Leaders of the protest inside the square, where some had attempted to
erect flimsy barricades ahead of the APCs, were said to have "implored"
the students not to use weapons (such as Molotov cocktails) against the
oncoming soldiers. Meanwhile, many students apparently were shouting,
"Why are you killing us?"

Zhao speaks during the 1989 Democracy Protests. Behind him (2nd
from right in black) is current State Council Premier Wen Jiabao.
The
suppression of the protest was immortalized in Western media by the
famous video footage and photographs of a lone man in a white shirt
standing in front of a column of tanks which were attempting to drive
out of Tiananmen Square. Taken on June 5 as the column approached an
intersection on the Avenue of Eternal Peace, the footage depicted the
unarmed man standing in the center of the street, halting the tanks'
progress. He reportedly said, "Why are you here? You have caused nothing
but misery." As the tank driver attempted to go around him, the "tank
man" moved into the tank's path. He continued to stand defiantly in
front of the tanks for some time, then climbed up onto the turret of the
lead tank to speak to the soldiers inside. After returning to his
position blocking the tanks, the man was pulled aside by onlookers who
perhaps feared he would be shot or run over. Time Magazine dubbed him
The Unknown Rebel and later named him one of the 100 most influential
people of the 20th century. British tabloid the Sunday Express reported
that the man was 19-year-old student Wang Weilin, however the veracity
of this claim is dubious. What happened to the 'tank man' following the
demonstration is not known. In a speech to the President's Club in 1999,
Bruce Herschensohn — former deputy special assistant to President
Richard Nixon — reported that he was executed 14 days later. In Red
China Blues: My Long March from Mao to Now, Jan Wong writes that the man
is still alive and hiding in mainland China. In Forbidden City, Canadian
children's author William Bell, claims the man was named Wang Ai-min and
was killed on June 9 after being taken into custody. The last official
statement from the PRC government about tank man came from Jiang Ziamin
in an interview with Barbara Walters, when asked about the where abouts
of tank man Ziamin responded that he "wasn't executed".
After the crackdown in Beijing on June 4, protests continued in
much of mainland China for several days. There were large protests in
Hong Kong, where people again wore black in protest. There were protests
in Guangzhou, and large-scale protests in Shanghai with a general
strike. There were also protests in other countries, many adopting the
use of black arm bands as well. However, the government soon regained
control. Although no large-scale loss of life was reported in ending the
protests in other cities, a political purge followed in which officials
responsible for organising or condoning the protests were removed, and
protest leaders jailed.
Number of deaths
The number of dead and wounded remains unclear. An unnamed
Chinese Red Cross official at the time reported that 2,600 people were
killed and 30,000 were injured. Two days later, Yuan Mu, the speaker of
the State Council, estimated that 300 soldiers and citizens died, 5,000
soldiers and 2,000 citizens injured, 400 soldiers lost contact, and that
many of the soldiers were burned alive by the protesters. Central
Committee of the Communist Party of China and State Council later
claimed that tens of PLA soldiers died and more were injured. The
Preparatory Committee of Autonomous Associations of Tsinghua University
claimed that 4,000 died and 30,000 were injured. Chen Xitong, Beijing
mayor, reported after the event that 36 students and tens of soldiers
died, amounting to a total of 200 dead, with 3,000 civilians and 6,000
soldiers injured.[8] Foreign reporters that witnessed the incident have
claimed that at least 3,000 people died. Some lists of casualties were
created from underground sources with numbers as high as 5,000.[9] In
contrast, before the government in Beijing had completely re-established
control over the news media in China, a monitored English language
broadcast from Beijing stated that at least 3,000 students died in the
massacre. At the same time, the Chinese Red Cross reported that they had
counted 2,600 people dead - and they still were counting. As both
sources are impossible to verify given that access to objective
information was impossible under martial law, the discrepancy between
the numbers of individuals killed is unresolved. Despite the
discrepancy, observers outside China (as well as some inside China)
generally agree that at least 400 and perhaps over 1,000 were killed, as
quoted by western media such as Los Angeles Times - but cannot agree on
the number of people who were injured.
The Chinese government has maintained that there were no deaths
within the square itself, which appears to outside observers to be
technically correct, as the Square itself was evacuated peacefully.
Aftermath
Arrests and purges
During and after the demonstration, authorities attempted to
arrest and prosecute the student leaders of the Chinese democracy
movement, notably Wang Dan, Chai Ling, Zhao Changqing and Wuer Kaixi.
Wang Dan was arrested, convicted, and sent to prison, then allowed to
emigrate to the United States on the grounds of medical parole. As a
lesser figure in the demonstrations, Zhao was released after six months
in prison. However, he was once again incarcerated for continuing to
petition for political reform in China. Wuer Kaixi escaped to the R.O.C.
in Taiwan. He is now married and he holds a job as a political
commentator on national Taiwan television [citation needed]. Chai Ling
escaped to France, and then to the United States.
Chinese authorities summarily tried and executed many of the
workers they arrested in Beijing. In contrast, the students - many of
whom came from relatively affluent backgrounds and were well-connected -
received much lighter sentences. Even Wang Dan, the student leader who
topped the most wanted list, spent only seven years in prison.
The Party leadership expelled Zhao Ziyang from the Politburo
Standing Committee of the Communist Party of China and the Communist
Party of China, because he opposed martial law, and Zhao remained under
house arrest until his death. Hu Qili, the other member of the Politburo
Standing Committee of the Communist Party of China who opposed the
martial law but chose not to vote instead of vetoing was also removed
from the Politburo Standing Committee of the Communist Party of China,
but he was able to retain his party membership, and after "Changing his
opinion", he was reassigned as vice-minister of Machine-Building and
Electronics Industry. The other member who opposed the martial law by
not voting instead vetoing it like Zhao Ziyang did was Qiao Shi[citation
needed], who was saved by his distant biological relationships with
Chiang Kai-shek and Chiang Ching-kuo because the need for Taiwan
issue[citation needed]: although Qiao Shi was also removed from the
Politburo Standing Committee of the Communist Party of China, he was
transferred to a different job with equal rank, though the post was
mostly ceremonial[citation needed]. Other reform minded Chinese leaders
such as Wan Li was also put under house arrest immediately after he
stepped out of the airplane at Beijing Capital International Airport
upon returning from his shortened trip abroad, with the official excuse
of "health reasons". When Wan Li was released from his house arrest
after he finally "changed his opinion" he, like Qiao Shi, was
transferred to a different position with equal rank but mostly
ceremonial role.
The event elevated Jiang Zemin - then Mayor of Shanghai who was
not involved in this event - to become PRC's President. Members of the
government prepared a white paper explaining the government's viewpoint
on the protests. An anonymous source within the PRC government smuggled
the document out of China, and Public Affairs published it in January
2001 as the Tiananmen Papers. The papers include a quote by Communist
Party elder Wang Zhen which alludes to the government's response to the
demonstrations.
Two CCTV presenters who reported the events of June 4 in the
"News Network" program were fired soon after the event. Wu Xiaoyong, the
son of a Communist Party of China Central Committee member, and former
PRC foreign minister and vice premier Wu Xueqian were removed from the
English Program Department of Chinese Radio International. Qian Liren,
director of the People's Daily (the newspaper of the Communist Party of
China), was also removed from his post because of reports in the paper
which were sympathetic towards the students.
Media coverage
The Tiananmen Square protests damaged the reputation of the PRC
in the West. Western media had been invited to cover the visit of
Mikhail Gorbachev in May, and were thus in an excellent position to
cover some of the government crackdown live through networks such as the
BBC and CNN. Protestors seized this opportunity, creating signs and
banners designed for international television audiences. Coverage was
further facilitated by the sharp conflicts within the Chinese government
about how to handle the protests. Thus broadcasting was not immediately
stopped.
CNN was eventually ordered to terminate broadcasts from the city
during the crackdown, and although the networks attempted to defy these
orders and were able to cover the protests via telephone, the government
was able to shut down the satellite links. Nonetheless, the image of
"the unknown rebel", in particular, was quickly broadcast on
international news programs.
Images of the protests - along with the collapse of Communism
that was occurring at the same time in the Soviet Union and Eastern
Europe - would strongly shape Western views and policy toward the PRC
throughout the 1990s and into the 21st century. There was considerable
sympathy for the student protests among Chinese students in the West.
Almost immediately, both the United States and the European Union
announced an arms embargo, and China's image as reforming country and
valuable ally against the Soviet Union was replaced by that of a
repressive authoritarian regime. The Tiananmen protests were frequently
invoked to argue against trade liberalization with mainland China and by
the United States' Blue Team as evidence that the PRC government was an
aggressive threat to world peace and US interests.
Among overseas Chinese students, the Tiananmen Square protests
triggered the formation of Internet news services such as the China News
Digest and the NGO China Support Network. In the aftermath of Tiananmen,
organizations such as the China Alliance for Democracy and the
Independent Federation of Chinese Students and Scholars were formed,
although these organizations would have limited political impact beyond
the mid-1990s.
The incident also made its way into a number of pop songs. It was
mentioned in Billy Joel's history-themed song "We Didn't Start the Fire"
("China's under martial law"); it was also the subject of Joan Baez'
1989 song "China" and "The Tiananmen Man" by Nevermore. The song
"Watching TV" from Roger Waters' 1992 solo album Amused to Death
explores the influence of mass media on the protests. More recently, it
was the subject of the 2005 song "Hypnotize" by System of a Down. The
Cure also performed a version of their own song "Faith" on the same day
as the disaster, dedicated to the people who died.
Impact on domestic political trends
The Tiananmen square protests dampened the growing concept of
political liberalization that was popular in the late 1980s; as a
result, many democratic reforms that were proposed during the 1980s were
swept under the carpet. Although there has been some increase in
personal freedom since then, discussions on structural changes to the
PRC government and the role of the Communist Party of China remain
largely taboo.
Despite early expectations in the West that PRC government would
soon collapse and be replaced by the Chinese democracy movement, by the
early 21st century the Communist Party of China remained in firm control
of the People's Republic of China, and the student movement which
started at Tiananmen was in complete disarray.
In Hong Kong, the Tiananmen square protests led to fears that the
PRC would not honour its commitments under one country, two systems in
the impending handover in 1997. One consequence of this was that the new
governor Chris Patten attempted to expand the franchise for the
Legislative Council of Hong Kong which led to friction with the PRC.
There have been large candlelight vigils attended by tens of thousands
in Hong Kong every year since 1989 and these vigils have continued
following the transfer of power to the PRC in 1997.
The protests also marked a shift in the political conventions
which governed politics in the People's Republic. Prior to the protests,
under the 1982 Constitution, the President was a largely symbolic role.
By convention, power was distributed between the positions of President,
Premier, and General Secretary of the Communist Party of China, all of
whom were intended to be different people, in order to prevent the
excesses of Mao-style dictatorship. However, after Yang Shangkun used
his reserve powers as head of state to mobilise the military, the
Presidency again became a position imbued with real power. Subsequently,
the President became the same person as the General Secretary of the
CPC, and wielded paramount power.

A memorial depicting a destroyed bicycle and a tank-track -
symbol of the Tiananmen Square protests - in the Polish city of Wroclaw
Economic impact
One reason for this was that the Tiananmen protests did not mark
the end of economic reform. Granted, in the immediate aftermath of the
protests, conservatives within the Communist Party attempted to curtail
some of the free market reforms that had been undertaken as part of
Chinese economic reform, and reinstitute administrative controls over
the economy. However, these efforts met with stiff resistance from
provincial governors and broke down completely in the early 1990s as a
result of the collapse of the Soviet Union and Deng Xiaoping's trip to
the south. The continuance of economic reform led to economic growth in
the 1990s, which allowed the government to regain much of the support
that it had lost in 1989. In addition, none of the current PRC
leadership played any active role in the decision to move against the
demonstrators, and one major leadership figure Premier Wen Jiabao was an
aide to Zhao Ziyang and accompanied him to meet the demonstrators. Today
there are economic "sectors" in which business can thrive and this has
improved the lives of many Chinese and opened up economic freedom and
access to goods.
The students leaders at Tiananmen were unable to produce a
coherent movement or ideology that would last past the mid-1990s. Many
of the student leaders came from relatively well off sectors of society
and were seen as out of touch with common people. A number of them were
socialists and wanted to revert China back to the socialist road. Many
of the organizations which were started in the aftermath of Tiananmen
soon fell apart due to personal infighting. Several overseas democracy
activists were supportive of limiting trade with mainland China which
significantly decreased their popularity both within China and among the
overseas Chinese community. A number of NGOs based in the U.S., which
aim to bring democratic reform to China and relentlessly protest human
rights violations that occur in China, remain. One of the oldest and
most prominent of them, the China Support Network (CSN), was founded in
1989 by a group of concerned Americans and Chinese activists in response
to Tiananmen Square.
A generation gap
Growing up with little memory of Tiananmen and no memory of the
Cultural Revolution, but with a full appreciation of the rising
prosperity and international influence of the PRC as well as the
difficulties that Russia has had since the end of the Cold War, many
Chinese no longer consider immediate political liberalization to be
wise, preferring to see slow stepwise democratization instead. Many
young Chinese, in view of PRC's rise, are now more concerned with
economic development, nationalism, the restoration of China's prestige
in international affairs, and perceived governmental weakness on issues
like the political status of Taiwan or the Diaoyu Islands dispute with
Japan.
Among intellectuals in mainland China, the impact of the
Tiananmen protests appears to have created something of a generation
gap. Intellectuals who were in their 20s at the time of the protests
tend to be far less supportive of the PRC government than younger
students who were born after the start of the Deng Xiaoping reforms.
Among urban industrial workers, the continuation of market
reforms in the 1990s brought with it higher standards of living as well
as increased economic uncertainty. Protests by urban industrial workers
over issues such as unpaid wages and local corruption remain frequent
with estimates of several thousand of these protests occurring each
year. The Communist Party of China appears unwilling to suffer the
negative attention of suppressing these protests provided that protests
remain directed at a local issue and do not call for deeper reform and
do not involve coordination with other workers. In a reversal of the
situation in 1989, the centre of discontent in mainland China appears to
be in rural areas, which have seen incomes stagnate in the 1990s and
have not been involved in much of the economic boom of that decade.
However, just as the lack of organization and the distribution of
peasants prevented them from becoming mobilized in support of the
government in 1989, these factors also inhibit mobilization against the
government in the early-21st century.
The present
Taboo in China
The topic is still a political taboo in mainland China, where any
public discussion of it is regarded as inappropriate. The only media
coverage takes the Communist Party of China's view: that it was a
necessary action to ensure stability. It is common for Chinese,
especially younger Chinese who live far from Beijing, to be entirely
unaware of the Tiananmen protests. Every year there is a large rally
in Hong Kong, where people remember the victims and demand that the
CPC's official view be changed.
However, petition letters over the incident have emerged from
time to time, notably from Dr. Jiang Yanyong and Tiananmen Mothers, an
organization founded by a mother of one of the victims killed in 1989.
Tiananmen Square is tightly patrolled on the anniversary of June 4 to
prevent any commemoration.
After the PRC Central Government reshuffle in 2004, several
cabinet members mentioned Tiananmen. In October 2004, during President
Hu Jintao's visit to France, he reiterated that "the government took
determined action to calm the political storm of 1989, and enabled China
to enjoy a stable development". He insisted that the government's view
on the incident would not change.
In March 2004, Premier Wen Jiabao said in a press conference that
during the 1990s there was a severe political storm in the PRC, amid the
breakdown of the Soviet Union and radical changes in Eastern Europe. He
stated that the Communist Central Committee successfully stabilized the
open-door policy and protected the "Career of Socialism with Chinese
Characteristics".
In 2005, Li Ao, a Taiwanese political activist and TV celebrity,
gave a guest lecture at Peking University. He hinted at the 1989
protests by referring to the Bonus March Incident[11] in the United
States nearly 50 years earlier. In the speech, he asserted that any
national government in the world would resort to using military force
when their rule is threatened.
In January 2006, Google agreed to censor their mainland China
site, Google.cn, to remove information about the 1989 Tiananmen Square
massacre [1], as well as other topics such as Tibetan independence, the
banned spiritual movement Falun Gong and the political status of Taiwan,
confirming that Tiananmen is still an issue the government wants to
avoid. The uncensored Wikipedia articles on the 1989 protests, both in
English and Chinese, have been attributed as a cause of the blocking of
Wikipedia by the government in mainland China. On November 16, 2006 the
Chinese government restored Wikipedia after blocking it for over a
year.[2] However, subsequent reports suggested that both the Chinese and
English versions had been re-blocked as of 17 November [12].
US-EU arms embargo
The United States and European Union embargo on weapons sales to
the PRC, put in place as a result of the violent suppression of the
Tiananmen Square pro-democracy protests still remains in place 17 years
later. The PRC has been calling for a lifting of the ban for many years
and has had a varying amount of support from members of the Council of
the European Union. In early 2004, France spearheaded the movement
within the EU to lift the ban. Former German Chancellor Gerhard Schröder
publicly added his voice to that of French President Jacques Chirac to
have the embargo lifted.
The arms embargo was discussed at a PRC-EU summit in the
Netherlands on December 7-9, 2004. In the runup to the summit, the PRC
had attempted to increase pressure on the EU Council to lift the ban by
warning that the ban could hurt PRC-EU relations. PRC Vice Foreign
Minister Zhang Yesui called the ban "outdated", and he told reporters,
"If the ban is maintained, bilateral relations will definitely be
affected." In the end, the EU Council did not lift the ban. EU
spokeswoman Françoise le Bail said there were still concerns about the
PRC's commitment to human rights. But at the time, the EU did state its
commitment to work towards lifting the ban. Bernard Bot, Foreign
Minister of the Netherlands, which held the EU's rotating presidency at
that time, said, "We are working assiduously but...the time is not right
to lift the embargo." Following the summit, the EU Council confirmed
that it had the political will to continue to work towards lifting the
embargo. PRC Premier Wen Jiabao said after the meeting that the embargo
did not reflect the partnership between the PRC and the EU.
The PRC continued to press for the embargo to be lifted, and some
member states began to drop their opposition. Jacques Chirac pledged to
have the ban lifted by mid-2005. However, the Anti-Secession Law of the
People's Republic of China passed in March 2005 increased cross-strait
tensions, damaging attempts to lift the ban, and several EU Council
members changed their minds. Members of the U.S. Congress had also
proposed restrictions on the transfer of military technology to the EU
if they lifted the ban. Thus the EU Council failed to reach a consensus
and although France and Germany pushed to have the embargo lifted, no
decision was agreed upon in subsequent meetings.
Britain took charge of the EU Presidency in the summer of 2005,
making the lifting of the embargo all but impossible for the duration of
the term. Britain had always had some reservations on lifting the ban
and wished to put it to the side, rather than sour EU-US relations
further. Perhaps more importantly, the failure of the European
Constitution and the ensuing disagreement over the European Budget and
Common Agricultural Policy has superseded the matter of the embargo in
importance. Britain wanted to use its presidency to push for wholesale
reform of the EU, so the lifting of the ban will become even more
unlikely. The election of a new European Commission President José
Manuel Durão Barroso, has also made a lifting of the ban more difficult.
At a meeting with Chinese leaders in mid-July 2005, he said that China's
poor record on human rights would slow any changes to the EU's ban on
arms sales to China.[13]
Political will may be changing in countries that are more in
favor of lifting the embargo. Schröder lost the 2005 German federal
election to Angela Merkel, who became chancellor on November 22, 2005,
and is strongly against lifting the ban. Other opposition leaders are
against lifting the ban. Jacques Chirac will find it difficult to remain
president in 2007—he may not even be a successful candidate, due to
losing the French vote over the European Constitution. Nicolas Sarkozy
is a strong contender for the French presidency and is not as much in
favor of lifting the ban as Chirac is.
In addition, the European Parliament has consistently opposed the
lifting of the arms embargo to the PRC. Though its agreement is not
necessary for lifting the ban, many argue it reflects the will of the
European people better as it is the only directly elected European
body—the EU Council is appointed by member states. The European
Parliament has repeatedly opposed any lifting of the arms embargo on the
PRC:
The resolution of April 28, 2005, on the Annual Report on Human
Rights in the World 2004 and the EU's policy on the matter,
The resolution of October 23, 2003, on the annual report from the
Council to the European Parliament on the main aspects and basic choices
of CFSP, it insisted on a peaceful resolution of the Taiwan issue
through dialogue across the Taiwan Straits and called on China to
withdraw missiles in the coastal provinces adjacent to the Taiwan
Straits and
The resolution on relations between the EU, China, and Taiwan and
security in the Far East of July 7, 2005. The EP has noted several times
that the current human rights situation in China, with regards to
fundamental civil, cultural and political freedoms does not meet even
the international standards recognized by China.
This arms embargo has limited China's options from where it may
seek military hardware. Among the sources that were sought included the
former Soviet bloc that it had a strained relationship with as a result
of the Sino-Soviet split. Other willing suppliers have been Israel and
South Africa.[citation needed]
Compensation
Although the Chinese government never acknowledged wrongdoing
when it came to the incident, in April 2006 a payment was made to the
family of one of the victims, the first publicized case of the
government offering redress to a Tiananmen-related victim's family. The
payment was termed a "hardship assistance", given to Tang Deying (???)
whose son, Zhou Guocong died at the age of 15 while in police custody in Chengdu on June 6,
1989, two days after the Chinese Army dispersed the Tiananmen
protestors. The woman was reportedly paid 70,000 yuan (approximately
$8,700 USD). This has been welcomed by various Chinese activists, but
was regarded by some as a measure to maintain social stability and not
believed to herald a changing of the Party's official position. |
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