Vigil donations to help fund archive on 1989 democracy movement
Donations totalling HK$2.1 million raised from the record number of attendees at the June 4 vigil in the city will go partly towards setting up a public archive on the 1989 pro-democracy movement in Beijing.
The record-breaking donation reflected residents' determination to seek vindication for the victims of the Tiananmen Square crackdown, said the Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements in China, which organised the annual vigil at Victoria Park on Thursday.
'It is amazing how Hong Kong people, despite being hard-hit by the financial tsunami, still decided to dig deep in support of the fight for a democratic China,' alliance vice-chairman Lee Cheuk-yan said. 'The donation figure and the huge turnout really showed their determination.'
The alliance set up fund-raising booths during the event, together with others manned by various political parties and pressure groups. It expected to see more than HK$1 million left over after deducting the cost of holding the vigil, and expenses for running its offices and activities.
Another vice-chairman, Richard Tsoi Yiu-cheung, said the group was considering using the money to create a permanent archive or small museum so that the public could have access to the information it had gathered about the June 4, 1989, incident.
'To pass on the torch of June 4 to the next generation, we need proper education, and one important avenue is to present and promote this part of history in a public archive,' Mr Tsoi said. This could complement the alliance's efforts in developing the internet as a tool to spread the word about the crackdown, he said.