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China paper censored for breach | China paper censored for breach |
(about 7 hours later) | |
A tabloid newspaper was withdrawn from newsstands in China after running a photograph from the 1989 crackdown on Tiananmen Square protesters. | |
The photo - of two wounded young men being taken away on a rickshaw - was carried in Thursday's Beijing News. | The photo - of two wounded young men being taken away on a rickshaw - was carried in Thursday's Beijing News. |
The picture was simply captioned "The Wounded", and no mention of the protests was made in the text. | The picture was simply captioned "The Wounded", and no mention of the protests was made in the text. |
But observers suggest newspaper staff could face further punishment for broaching what remains a taboo subject. | |
China's ruling Communist Party initially tolerated the student-led pro-democracy protests, but finally sent in soldiers to put them down on the night of 3-4 June 1989. | China's ruling Communist Party initially tolerated the student-led pro-democracy protests, but finally sent in soldiers to put them down on the night of 3-4 June 1989. |
Hundreds of people are thought to have been killed, though there has been no public disclosure of the death toll or investigation into what happened. | Hundreds of people are thought to have been killed, though there has been no public disclosure of the death toll or investigation into what happened. |
Repercussions | Repercussions |
The photograph was printed alongside an interview with the Hong Kong-born American photographer Liu Xiangcheng as an example of his work. | The photograph was printed alongside an interview with the Hong Kong-born American photographer Liu Xiangcheng as an example of his work. |
As soon as Chinese officials noticed, they ordered the removal of the paper from the news-stands and part of its website was blocked. | As soon as Chinese officials noticed, they ordered the removal of the paper from the news-stands and part of its website was blocked. |
The newspaper has made no comment on how the picture came to be published. | The newspaper has made no comment on how the picture came to be published. |
However, given China's tight controls on what is written about politically sensitive subjects, it seems most likely to have been a mistake by staff who did not realise the significance of the photo, rather than a deliberate act, says the BBC's East Asia reporter Stephen Jackson. | However, given China's tight controls on what is written about politically sensitive subjects, it seems most likely to have been a mistake by staff who did not realise the significance of the photo, rather than a deliberate act, says the BBC's East Asia reporter Stephen Jackson. |
Either way, there are likely to be repercussions for senior staff at the paper, he adds. | Either way, there are likely to be repercussions for senior staff at the paper, he adds. |
Last year the authorities sacked three editors on a provincial newspaper for printing an advert praising the mothers of the Tiananmen victims for their campaign for justice. | Last year the authorities sacked three editors on a provincial newspaper for printing an advert praising the mothers of the Tiananmen victims for their campaign for justice. |
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