Advertisement

Security tight in China and Hong Kong on Tiananmen anniversary

People walk past policemen stationed outside the walls of the Forbidden City at Tiananmen Square in Beijing on Jun 4, 2024. (Photo: AFP/Adek Berry)

04 Jun 2024 12:21PM (Updated: 04 Jun 2024 12:39PM)

BEIJING: China authorities said they would close Beijing’s Tiananmen Square on Tuesday, the 35th anniversary of the Jun 4 incident, while Hong Kong police also tightened security as activists in Taiwan and elsewhere prepared to mark the date with vigils.

Chinese tanks rolled into the square before dawn on Jun 4, 1989, to end weeks of student and worker protests.

Decades after the incident rights activists say the demonstrators’ original goals – including a free press and freedom of speech – remain distant, and Jun 4 is still a taboo topic in China.

The ruling Communist Party has never released a death toll, though rights groups and witnesses say the figure could run into the thousands.

Taiwan’s president Lai Ching-te said in a statement on Tuesday that “the memory of June 4th will not disappear in the torrent of history”.

Lai, who was inaugurated last month as the leader of the democratic island China claims as its own, added that Taiwan would “respond to authoritarianism with freedom”.

In Beijing, an official website for Tiananmen Square posted a notice earlier saying the square would be closed for the entire day on Jun 4, and that those who had bought tickets for the square could get them refunded. The official social media account of the Beijing subway network announced that an exit of Tiananmen East station would be closed from Jun 2 to 5.

Small groups of “stability maintenance” volunteers – retirees with red armbands – have been keeping watch at neighbourhoods in central Beijing since last week. Guards have also been stationed on pedestrian bridges, a regular practice during politically sensitive periods.

On Chinese social media platforms including WeChat and Douyin, users were unable to change their profile photos, according to online posts and Reuters tests.

“Thirty-five years have passed, and the authorities remain silent. All that can be seen on the internet is ‘A Concise History of the Communist Party of China’, which says that a tragic incident was caused by the student movement in 1989,” wrote the Tiananmen Mothers, a group of mostly China-based survivors and families of the victims of the Tiananmen incident.

“We cannot accept or tolerate such statements that ignore the facts.”

Police stand guard at Causeway Bay, ahead of the 35th anniversary of the crackdown on demonstrators at Beijing’s Tiananmen Square in 1989, near where the candlelight vigil is usually held, in Hong Kong, China, on Jun 3, 2024. (Photo: REUTERS/Tyrone Siu)

In Hong Kong, police officers tightened security around downtown Victoria Park, where large Jun 4 candlelight vigils had earlier been held annually before tougher new national security laws came into force in recent years.

Performance artist Sanmu Chen was taken away on Monday night by police as he attempted a mime performance near a police van. Chen was later released.

Last Tuesday, Hong Kong police arrested six people for sedition under a new national security law enacted this year, stemming from what media said were online posts linked to Jun 4. Two more have been arrested since.