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Tiananmen Square: China minister defends 1989 crackdown | Tiananmen Square: China minister defends 1989 crackdown |
(about 1 hour later) | |
China has defended the crackdown on the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests in a rare public acknowledgement of events. | China has defended the crackdown on the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests in a rare public acknowledgement of events. |
Defence Minister Wei Fenghe told a regional forum that stopping the "turbulence" was the "correct" policy. | Defence Minister Wei Fenghe told a regional forum that stopping the "turbulence" was the "correct" policy. |
In spring 1989, students and workers occupied Beijing's Tiananmen Square in a massive pro-democracy protest. Many were killed in a brutal clampdown by the communist authorities. | In spring 1989, students and workers occupied Beijing's Tiananmen Square in a massive pro-democracy protest. Many were killed in a brutal clampdown by the communist authorities. |
Reporting on the events is heavily censored in China. | Reporting on the events is heavily censored in China. |
Tuesday marks 30 years since six weeks of demonstrations ended with the Beijing massacre of 3-4 June. | Tuesday marks 30 years since six weeks of demonstrations ended with the Beijing massacre of 3-4 June. |
What did the minister say? | |
Public discussions of the 1989 pro-democracy protests and their suppression are strictly taboo in China. | |
But after a wide-ranging speech about trade and security at a regional forum in Singapore, General Wei Fenghe was asked about Tiananmen by a member of the audience. | |
Mr Wei questioned why people still said China had not handled the events properly. | |
"That incident was a political turbulence and the central government took measures to stop the turbulence, which is a correct policy," he told the forum. | |
"The past 30 years have proven that China has undergone major changes," he said, adding that because of the government's action at that time "China has enjoyed stability and development". | |
'Acts of forgettance' | 'Acts of forgettance' |
There are no official acts of remembrance for the events of 1989 in Beijing. But that statement, although factually correct, is far too neutral. | There are no official acts of remembrance for the events of 1989 in Beijing. But that statement, although factually correct, is far too neutral. |
In truth, what happened in Tiananmen Square is marked faithfully each year by a massive, national act of what might more properly be called "forgettance". | In truth, what happened in Tiananmen Square is marked faithfully each year by a massive, national act of what might more properly be called "forgettance". |
In the weeks leading up to 4 June, the world's biggest censorship machine goes into overdrive as a huge dragnet of automated algorithms and tens of thousands of human expurgators cleanse the internet of any reference, however oblique. | In the weeks leading up to 4 June, the world's biggest censorship machine goes into overdrive as a huge dragnet of automated algorithms and tens of thousands of human expurgators cleanse the internet of any reference, however oblique. |
Those deemed to have been too provocative in their attempts to evade the controls can be jailed - with sentences of up to three and a half years recently handed down to a group of men who had tried to commemorate the anniversary with a product label. | Those deemed to have been too provocative in their attempts to evade the controls can be jailed - with sentences of up to three and a half years recently handed down to a group of men who had tried to commemorate the anniversary with a product label. |
Read more from John | Read more from John |
What happened in 1989? | |
More than one million pro-democracy protesters occupied Tiananmen Square in April 1989 and began the largest political demonstration in communist China's history. It lasted six weeks. | |
Protests spread to cities and universities across the country. | |
The demonstrators called for greater freedom and democracy and an end to what they called dictatorship - others complained about inflation, salaries and housing. | |
On the night of 3 June tanks moved in and troops opened fire, killing and injuring many unarmed people in and around Tiananmen Square. | |
Afterwards the authorities claimed no-one had been shot dead in the square itself. | |
The Chinese government has never said how many protesters were killed, although estimates range from the hundreds to thousands. |