This article is from the source 'bbc' and was first published or seen on . It will not be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/-/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/8066992.stm
The article has changed 2 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Previous version
1
Next version
Version 0 | Version 1 |
---|---|
20 years on: Memories of Tiananmen | 20 years on: Memories of Tiananmen |
(1 day later) | |
On 3-4 June 1989, hundreds - possibly thousands - of Chinese protesters were killed when their call for democracy on Beijing's Tiananmen Square was brutally crushed. | On 3-4 June 1989, hundreds - possibly thousands - of Chinese protesters were killed when their call for democracy on Beijing's Tiananmen Square was brutally crushed. |
Here some of the people affected by the massacre describe their experiences to the BBC. Click on the quotes for full interviews in video and text. | |
Official | Bao Tong | |
What I feel most guilty about is that the 4 June incident happened while I was one of those tasked with bringing in political reform. | What I feel most guilty about is that the 4 June incident happened while I was one of those tasked with bringing in political reform. |
Bao Tong was a senior Communist Party official with a reformist agenda. He was arrested shortly before the Tiananmen crackdown, and remains under house arrest. | Bao Tong was a senior Communist Party official with a reformist agenda. He was arrested shortly before the Tiananmen crackdown, and remains under house arrest. |
Student leader | Wu'er Kaixi | |
If I had known the result would be so bloody, would I have still done the same? The answer is perhaps not. | If I had known the result would be so bloody, would I have still done the same? The answer is perhaps not. |
Protest organiser Wu'er Kaixi fled China following the demonstration, and remains a political commentator and democracy activist. | Protest organiser Wu'er Kaixi fled China following the demonstration, and remains a political commentator and democracy activist. |
Mother | Ding Zilin | |
I said to my husband and son, something's going to happen today. But my son... said there were still so many people on the square that he wanted to go. | I said to my husband and son, something's going to happen today. But my son... said there were still so many people on the square that he wanted to go. |
Ding Zilin is one of hundreds of parents whose children were killed in the Tiananmen massacre. | Ding Zilin is one of hundreds of parents whose children were killed in the Tiananmen massacre. |
Worker | Han Dongfang | |
If we see this as a boxing match, yes somebody hit our face, we got a broken nose. But that match is not finished yet. | If we see this as a boxing match, yes somebody hit our face, we got a broken nose. But that match is not finished yet. |
Han Dongfang, a railway worker, became the spokesman for China's first autonomous workers' union, set up in the square on 19 May 1989. | Han Dongfang, a railway worker, became the spokesman for China's first autonomous workers' union, set up in the square on 19 May 1989. |
Photographer | Jeff Widener | |
Suddenly this man walks out with his shopping bags. My first instinct was: "He's going to mess up my composition". | Suddenly this man walks out with his shopping bags. My first instinct was: "He's going to mess up my composition". |
Jeff Widener took the image of the lone Tiananmen protester who stood in front of a convoy of tanks - probably the most iconic image of the crackdown. | Jeff Widener took the image of the lone Tiananmen protester who stood in front of a convoy of tanks - probably the most iconic image of the crackdown. |
Local resident | Anonymous | |
There isn't any information about this in any of our textbooks for primary and middle school students. But this is something that we cannot forget. | There isn't any information about this in any of our textbooks for primary and middle school students. But this is something that we cannot forget. |
This eyewitness was in Beijing throughout the protests and saw many injured people. He is still afraid of speaking out about what he saw. | This eyewitness was in Beijing throughout the protests and saw many injured people. He is still afraid of speaking out about what he saw. |
China's unofficial leader at the time, Deng Xiaoping, said the crackdown was necessary because the government was dealing with "a number of rebels" and people who were "the dregs of society". Click here to read a speech he made shortly after the massacre, explaining the government's actions. | China's unofficial leader at the time, Deng Xiaoping, said the crackdown was necessary because the government was dealing with "a number of rebels" and people who were "the dregs of society". Click here to read a speech he made shortly after the massacre, explaining the government's actions. |
Previous version
1
Next version