Survivors and supporters keep the flame of Tiananmen Square protests in 1989 alive
BY TOBY PORTER
toby@londonweeklynews.online
Human rights campaigners have renamed streets around the Chinese Embassy on the 30th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square outrage.
Amnesty International activists laid a total of 30 symbolic but authentic-looking Tiananmen Square signs on Tuesday to mark the anniversary corner of Portland Place and Weymouth Street.
Amnesty UK director Kate Allen and Dr Shao Jiang – one of the original student protest leaders who was in Tiananmen Square on the night of June 4 – placed a Tiananmen Square sign immediately outside the Chinese Embassy building.
Dr Shao Jiang said: “I will never forget the events of that night, and we must ensure the world always remembers those who suffered in the fight for democracy, human rights and freedom.
“The Chinese Government wants to pretend the bloody massacre never happened – but we will not rest until we have the truth independently investigated and those responsible brought to justice.
“With every year that passes, achieving justice becomes even more difficult for family members of the thousands who were killed, injured or imprisoned in Beijing and across China – but we must always stand together and keep fighting for justice, for them and for us all.
“Along with Amnesty, we will remember the ‘Tank Man’ who showed us the hope and dignity of humanity, whose spirit keeps inspiring us in our struggles ahead.”
Kate Allen said: “Thirty years after the crackdown in Tiananmen Square, there is still no remembrance or acknowledgement allowed in mainland China.
“But we remember the bravery of those who protested in Tiananmen, and we stand in solidarity with brave Chinese human rights defenders still campaigning for justice today.
“A new generation of Chinese human rights activists are keeping the flame of the Tiananmen protests alive, and we celebrate their ongoing defiance.”
On Tuesday evening, activists held a candlelit vigil outside the Chinese Embassy from 8pm to 10pm.
Amnesty say any reference to the Tiananmen crackdown is still systematically censored in China, and anyone who seeks to commemorate the victims does so at great personal risk.
Earlier this week, Amnesty warned that the Chinese authorities are targeting those seeking to commemorate the victims of the crackdown.
In recent weeks, police have detained, placed under house arrest or threatened dozens of activists and relatives of those killed seeking to mark the June 4 anniversary.
Dr Jiang was involved in student movements from 1985 to 1989 when he was a student at Beijing University.
On April 17, 1989, he drafted a list of demands with his fellow students. Later the demands became one of the main manifestos of the 1989 pro-democracy movement.
In the evening of June 3, he witnessed the killings in West Chang’an Avenue, before rushing back to Tiananmen Square to warn fellow protesters of what was coming.
He pleaded with the ‘Four Gentlemen’ protest leaders including Liu Xiaobo – known as China’s Nelson Mandela – to retreat by negotiating with army leaders.
He was among the last group of protesters to leave the square in the early morning of June 4.
Dr Jiang was jailed for 18 months in a series of provincial and national prisons during 1989-91, and again detained and put under house arrest for his involvement in civil resistance between 1994 and 1997.
He fled China in 1997 and has been in the UK since 2003.