Hong Kong steps up security on Tiananmen anniversary, Taiwan decries
suppression
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[June 04, 2022]
By Jessie Pang and Ben Blanchard
HONG KONG/TAIPEI (Reuters) -Hong Kong deployed heavy security near a
major park on Saturday as it warned people not to gather to commemorate
China's bloody crackdown on pro-democracy demonstrators in Tiananmen
Square 33 years ago, as Taiwan decried efforts to erase the memories.
Saturday marks the anniversary of Chinese troops opening fire to end the
student-led unrest in and around the square in central Beijing. China
has never provided a full death toll, but rights groups and witnesses
say the figure could run into the thousands.
"To remember is to resist," prominent Chinese human rights lawyer Teng
Biao told Reuters from the United States. "If nobody remembers, the
suffering of the people will never stop and the perpetrators will
continue their crimes with impunity."
Chinese authorities ban any public commemoration of the event on the
mainland, and the Hong Kong authorities have clamped down too.
In Hong Kong's Victoria Park, where people had come together for an
annual vigil before the COVID-19 pandemic hit, authorities blocked off
main parts of the venue and warned residents against illegal gatherings.
Soccer pitches and basketball courts, which would usually be full on a
Saturday, lay empty as hundreds of police, some with sniffer dogs,
patrolled the area.
The city's leader, Carrie Lam, said this week that any events to
commemorate those killed in the 1989 crackdown would be subject to
national security laws.
"Everyone is remaining silent because they are terrified of getting
arrested," Hong Kong resident Victor, 57, who asked to be identified
only by his first name, said inside Victoria Park.
China imposed a national security law on Hong Kong in June 2020
punishing acts of subversion, terrorism and collusion with foreign
forces with up to life in prison.
Since the legislation was imposed, people or organisations affiliated
with the sensitive June 4 date and events to mark it have been targeted.
Activists have been jailed, the alliance that
organised the annual vigil disbanded, the June 4th Museum closed its
physical location and reopened online and two universities removed the
Pillar of Shame - an artwork of anguished human torsos - and the Goddess
of Democracy statues from their campuses.
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Police officers stand guard after announcing a closure of a part of
Victoria Park, where the candlelight vigil used to be held, a day a
head of the 33rd anniversary of the crackdown on pro-democracy
demonstrations at Beijing's Tiananmen Square, in Hong Kong, China,
June 3, 2022. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu
Hong Kong has banned the annual vigil since 2020, citing coronavirus
restrictions. Some democracy campaigners accuse authorities of using
those rules to suppress activism, a claim that officials reject.
Current COVID-19 restrictions allow up to eight people to dine
together, though gatherings outside are capped at four people.
Last year, police blocked off the Hong Kong park to prevent people
gathering to commemorate the anniversary and arrested the planned
vigil's organiser.
In Chinese-claimed but staunchly democratic Taiwan, where public
commemorations are due on Saturday in Taipei, President Tsai Ing-wen
decried the "collective memory of June 4 being systematically erased
in Hong Kong".
"But we believe that such brute force cannot erase people's
memories," she posted on her Facebook and Instagram pages. "When
democracy is threatened and authoritarianism in the world is
expanding, we need to uphold democratic values."
Taiwan tends to use the Tiananmen Square anniversary to criticise
China and urge it to face up to what it did, to Beijing's repeated
annoyance.
U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken, in a statement on Saturday
Asia time, called the Tiananmen crackdown "a brutal assault".
"The efforts of these brave individuals will not be forgotten. Each
year, we honour and remember those who stood up for human rights and
fundamental freedoms," he said.
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian, at a routine news
conference on Thursday, reiterated Beijing's line on the events.
"The Chinese government has long ago come to a clear conclusion
about the political incident that happened in late 1980s," he said.
(Reporting by Ben Blanchard and Jessie Pang; Additional reporting by
James Pomfret, Phoebe Law, Joyce Zhou and Anne Marie Roantree;
Editing by Stephen Coates and William Mallard)
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