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Tiananmen will not be forgotten | Tiananmen will not be forgotten |
(5 days later) | |
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Kate Adie returned to China to assess what changes had taken place | |
By Kate Adie | By Kate Adie |
Tourists flock in their hundreds of thousands to Tiananmen Square in the heart of Beijing. | Tourists flock in their hundreds of thousands to Tiananmen Square in the heart of Beijing. |
They can marvel at history in the Forbidden City and gaze at modern China's fashionably dressed citizens dodging shoals of Mercedes. | They can marvel at history in the Forbidden City and gaze at modern China's fashionably dressed citizens dodging shoals of Mercedes. |
What they will not see is any hint of the recent past in Tiananmen Square - there is nothing which commemorates the deaths of the hundreds, perhaps thousands of people in June 1989, the massacre which brought a brutal end to many weeks of demonstrations. | What they will not see is any hint of the recent past in Tiananmen Square - there is nothing which commemorates the deaths of the hundreds, perhaps thousands of people in June 1989, the massacre which brought a brutal end to many weeks of demonstrations. |
Twenty years later, we wanted to make a programme about what happened to those caught up in the events - the student leaders, the workers and those who were injured or knew someone who had died. | Twenty years later, we wanted to make a programme about what happened to those caught up in the events - the student leaders, the workers and those who were injured or knew someone who had died. |
And because recent history has been re-written by the Chinese authorities, we anticipated problems. | And because recent history has been re-written by the Chinese authorities, we anticipated problems. |
We applied for the official "journalist visas", announced during last year's Olympic Games - offering greater openness and freedom for the foreign press. | We applied for the official "journalist visas", announced during last year's Olympic Games - offering greater openness and freedom for the foreign press. |
Engaging ineptitude | Engaging ineptitude |
Chen Yunfei paid a high price for protest | |
After months of waiting - and advice from Chinese journalists that hen's teeth might be more available - we entered the country on tourist visas. | After months of waiting - and advice from Chinese journalists that hen's teeth might be more available - we entered the country on tourist visas. |
Our first two days of filming involved uniformed policemen sticking their white-gloved hands in front of the lens, while their plainclothes counterparts attempted to tail us through heavy traffic in Chengdu - with engaging ineptitude. | Our first two days of filming involved uniformed policemen sticking their white-gloved hands in front of the lens, while their plainclothes counterparts attempted to tail us through heavy traffic in Chengdu - with engaging ineptitude. |
At one point we were followed by five vehicles, all of which appeared to have no idea how to tail anyone - especially when we abandoned our driver and hopped on a bus. | At one point we were followed by five vehicles, all of which appeared to have no idea how to tail anyone - especially when we abandoned our driver and hopped on a bus. |
At one point we made a detour to avoid leading them to an interviewee - who is known to the police for dissident views - and I ended up in an organic farm talking earnestly to a rather puzzled man about cabbages while the police officers bobbed up and down behind a field of flowering rapeseed. | At one point we made a detour to avoid leading them to an interviewee - who is known to the police for dissident views - and I ended up in an organic farm talking earnestly to a rather puzzled man about cabbages while the police officers bobbed up and down behind a field of flowering rapeseed. |
It would all seem something of a cat and mouse game for us, except for the fact that the people we were intending to interview all suffer endless harassment and surveillance - and have done ever since 1989. | It would all seem something of a cat and mouse game for us, except for the fact that the people we were intending to interview all suffer endless harassment and surveillance - and have done ever since 1989. |
As we slipped our "tail" and organised a rendez-vous in safe and discreet locations, we became ever more aware of the mammoth security system which can be brought to bear on those whom the state designates "trouble-makers". | As we slipped our "tail" and organised a rendez-vous in safe and discreet locations, we became ever more aware of the mammoth security system which can be brought to bear on those whom the state designates "trouble-makers". |
Security cameras | Security cameras |
Tourists probably don't notice that Beijing boasts 280,000 security cameras; it is rumoured that the muscular lads who offer to be guides in Tiananmen Square, sell you postcards and ice-cream, are all members of the secret police. | Tourists probably don't notice that Beijing boasts 280,000 security cameras; it is rumoured that the muscular lads who offer to be guides in Tiananmen Square, sell you postcards and ice-cream, are all members of the secret police. |
Zhang Xianling founded Tiananmen Mothers after losing her son | Zhang Xianling founded Tiananmen Mothers after losing her son |
The people we spoke to frequently find police outside their flat, cameras trained on their front door and their phones tapped. | The people we spoke to frequently find police outside their flat, cameras trained on their front door and their phones tapped. |
It is no wonder that they used their mobiles (several!) to arrange to meet us. | It is no wonder that they used their mobiles (several!) to arrange to meet us. |
What is surprising - and impressive - is their determination to talk about what happened, bear witness to the massacre and explain why they continue to demand that the authorities admit what they did to their own people. | What is surprising - and impressive - is their determination to talk about what happened, bear witness to the massacre and explain why they continue to demand that the authorities admit what they did to their own people. |
They talk of being spirited from their homes every time there is a "sensitive time" - such as Party congresses or the Olympics, and being taken hundreds of miles away so that journalists cannot find them. | They talk of being spirited from their homes every time there is a "sensitive time" - such as Party congresses or the Olympics, and being taken hundreds of miles away so that journalists cannot find them. |
Many have been imprisoned for speaking out, yet they will not give up and their determination is breath-taking. | Many have been imprisoned for speaking out, yet they will not give up and their determination is breath-taking. |
There's Mrs Zhang, founder of the Tiananmen Mothers, a group which supports those who lost their sons and daughters, killed by an army which was firing relentlessly all the way into the city. | There's Mrs Zhang, founder of the Tiananmen Mothers, a group which supports those who lost their sons and daughters, killed by an army which was firing relentlessly all the way into the city. |
Her son was shot - he had no idea what was happening when he went out "just to take some photographs". | Her son was shot - he had no idea what was happening when he went out "just to take some photographs". |
She speaks with great dignity, one of the few voices among 1.3 billion who want the truth acknowledged - and who speak of their hopes for justice and more freedom. | She speaks with great dignity, one of the few voices among 1.3 billion who want the truth acknowledged - and who speak of their hopes for justice and more freedom. |
Kate Adie Returns to Tiananmen Square was on BBC Two at 9pm on Wednesday 3 June 2009 and will be available for seven days at class="inlineText" href="http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b00l17sy/Kate_Adie_Returns_to_Tiananmen_Square/" >BBC iPlayer |
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