Past and present Taiwanese presidents honour 1989 Tiananmen protests while gatherings are banned
- Former president Ma Ying-jeou said Beijing needed to face up to history over the protests, and that would help bridge cross-strait differences
- A Hong Kong censorship-tracking project uncovers Weibo messages deleted on Friday, including posts about the need to acknowledge history
Mainland China has never allowed public remembrance of the 1989 protests which demanded political reforms and greater freedoms, and Beijing heavily censors all information relating to the event. The movement ended with a violent military crackdown on June 4, 1989 that killed hundreds or even thousands, according to some estimates.
“I believe all Taiwanese people who are proud of freedom and democracy will never forget this day in history, and will hold tighter to our convictions,” Tsai wrote.
Ma, who favours direct dialogue between Taiwan and the mainland, urged more communication in his Facebook post. He said Beijing needed to face up to history over the 1989 protests, and that would help bridge the cross-strait differences instead of the two sides drifting further apart.
He wrote that it was heartbreaking to see the breakdown in the relationship between mainland China and Taiwan, as friendly voices were drowned out in the angry rhetoric crossing the Taiwan Strait.
“Only through people on both sides … letting go of animosities can there be a future,” Ma wrote.
In Beijing on Friday, there were few signs that Tiananmen Square was in any way remarkable, as tourists in red hats and women posing with children milled about in front of the square.
What the Tiananmen Square crackdown on June 4, 1989 was about
A tighter police presence was the only marker of the politically sensitive anniversary. Late on Thursday, there were several vehicles marked “military police” or “special police” along Chang’an Avenue in Beijing where Tiananmen Square is located.
On Thursday, the government announced the square would be closed from June 23 to July 1 before the party’s centenary celebrations.
Information on the Tiananmen Square crackdown has long been heavily censored in China, with even vague mentions on Chinese social media sites promptly removed.
Xu Xibai, a researcher of civil society in China, said on Twitter he was permanently banned from the Chinese social media platform Weibo after he posted a photo of a candle and the words “Good Night” ahead of the 32nd anniversary.
“A date that has been banned, like a river that suddenly disappears in a desert,” another said. “If you do not forget them, the dead will germinate and blossom into flowers.”
‘Tracked for life’: China relentless in erasing Tiananmen
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken issued a statement on Thursday calling for transparency around the events of June 4, including “a full accounting of all those killed, detained or missing”.
“The United States will continue to stand with the people of China as they demand that their government respect human rights,” he said. ”We honour the sacrifices of those killed 32 years ago, and the brave activists who carry on their efforts today in the face of ongoing government repression.”