Tiananmen crackdown will not disappear ‘into the torrent of history’ says Lai Ching-te

Tiananmen crackdown will not disappear ‘into the torrent of history’ says Lai Ching-te
Tiananmen crackdown will not disappear ‘into the torrent of history’ says Lai Ching-te

The Chinese government’s crackdown on Beijing’s Tiananmen Square will not go away “in the torrent of history”said the new Taiwanese President Lai Ching-te on Tuesday June 4 for the 35th anniversary of the event.

“The memories of June 4 will not disappear in the torrent of history and we will continue to work hard to keep this historical memory alive,” For “all those who are attached to Chinese democracy”, Mr. Lai, who took office in May, wrote on Facebook.

“Because it reminds us that democracy and freedom are not easy to achieve, we must […] respond to autocracy with freedom and confront the rise of authoritarianism with courage”added the leader.

An annual vigil in Taipei

On June 4, 1989, China sent troops and tanks against pro-democracy and peaceful demonstrators in Beijing’s main central square to end weeks of protests calling for political change.

Hundreds of people, even more than a thousand by some estimates, were killed. The subject is particularly sensitive for China’s communist leaders and any mention of the repression is strictly censored in the country. Many young Chinese today are unaware of this part of Chinese history because of this censorship.

In Taipei, an annual vigil is planned for Tuesday at 6:40 p.m. (10:40 GMT) at the Chiang Kai-shek memorial. China believes that Taiwan is one of its provinces, which it has not yet succeeded in reunifying with its territory since the end of the civil war and the coming to power of the communists in Beijing in 1949. Beijing has accused President Lai Ching-te to push the island towards ” the war “accusing him of being a “dangerous separatist”.

-

-

PREV Electricity prices: how the Senate found a way to reduce the French people’s bill by 40%
NEXT The price of all insurance contracts will soon increase because of this new law