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A man pictured attending the vigil in Hong Kong on Sunday to mark the anniversary of the crackdown against pro-democracy demonstrators in Tiananmen Square. Photo: SCMP Pictures

China dismisses US call for ‘full accounting’ of Tiananmen crackdown

Foreign ministry says the US should stop making ‘groundless accusations’ over the suppression of the prodemocracy demonstrations in Beijing in 1989

The United States should reject its “prejudices” and stop making groundless accusations, China’s foreign ministry said, after US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson called for a full accounting of the 1989 crackdown on pro-democracy protesters in Beijing.

China’s Communist Party rulers sent in tanks on June 4, 1989, to quell the protests in and around Beijing’s Tiananmen Square and has never released a death toll. Estimates from human rights groups and witnesses range from several hundred to several thousand.

On Sunday, the 28th anniversary of the crackdown, Tillerson reiterated a US call for China to make a full accounting of those killed, detained, or missing.

“We urge China to cease harassment of family members seeking redress and to release from prison those who have been jailed for striving to keep the memory of Tiananmen Square alive,” he said in a statement on the State Department’s website.

In a short statement in English, carried by China’s state-run Xinhua news agency late on Monday, China’s foreign ministry said the government had “already made definitive conclusions on the political turbulence in the late 1980s”.
US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson. Photo: The Washington Post

“The US side ignored objective facts, made groundless accusations of the Chinese government year after year and interfered in China’s internal affairs,” Xinhua said, citing the ministry.

“China is firmly opposed to the US activities and has made solemn representations to the United States,” it added.

“We urge the US side to discard prejudices, rectify wrongdoings and safeguard the steady development of China-US ties through real actions.”

China and the United States frequently clash over human rights issues, although the Trump administration has been criticised by rights groups for downplaying the issue.

Tillerson said the United States views the protection of human rights as a “fundamental duty of all countries”.

“We urge the Chinese government to respect the universal rights and fundamental freedoms of all its citizens.”

Public discussion of the events of 1989 in mainland China is taboo, although every year thousands of people join a vigil in Hong Kong to commemorate the event.

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