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Annual vigil honors Tiananmen dead Kelvin Chan

Thousands gather in Hong Kong to recall event Beijing blots out

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Thousands of Hong Kongers attended a candleligh­t vigil Sunday to commemorat­e victims of the Chinese government’s brutal military crackdown on protesters in Beijing ’s Tiananmen Square in 1989, and Taiwan’s president called on Beijing to “face up” to the history.

Hundreds if not thousands of unarmed protesters and onlookers were killed late on June 3 and the early hours of June 4, 1989, after China’s communist leaders ordered the military to retake Tiananmen Square from the student-led demonstrat­ors. Commemorat­ion of the events, public or private, remains taboo in mainland China.

Taiwanese President Tsai Ingwen said in posts on Facebook and Twitter that 28 years ago, the actions of students and citizens who challenged the political system in China “inspired a generation.”

She appealed to Beijing to “face up to June 4 with an open mind” and said Taiwan was willing to share its experience­s of transition­ing to democracy in the late 1980s to ease the pains of such a transition in the mainland.

“For democracy: some are early, others are late, but we will all get there in the end,” Tsai wrote on Twitter.

While mainland Chinese are only dimly aware of what happened at Tiananmen Square, the subject is openly discussed in Taiwan, a self-governing island, and Hong Kong, a special Chinese region with autonomy and legally entrenched freedom of speech and other civil rights unseen on the mainland.

The annual evening vigil in Hong Kong is the only large-scale commemorat­ion on Chinese territory of the Tiananmen bloodshed. About 110,000 people attended on Sunday, according to organizers, while police estimated the turnout at 18,000. Last year, the numbers were 125,000 and 21,800, respective­ly.

People held up their lit cellphones — some with pictures of candles on the screen — as a band played songs to rally the crowd and activists gave speeches about the importance of getting young people to attend.

“I don’t want this part of history to become blurred,” said Emily Yu, 42, who attended the gathering in Victoria Park. “It was really a massacre of people. Those young people came out and did all they could for freedom and democracy but didn’t achieve it.”

Eloise Wu, 36, who works for a non-government­al organizati­on, said: “We don’t want to let people think we’ve forgotten, as if with the passing of time it’s like, ‘ Oh, this never really happened.’ No. Every year we remember.”

 ?? KIN CHEUNG, AP ?? A candleligh­t vigil Sunday at Hong Kong ’s Victoria Park marks China’s infamous bloody crackdown on protesters in 1989.
KIN CHEUNG, AP A candleligh­t vigil Sunday at Hong Kong ’s Victoria Park marks China’s infamous bloody crackdown on protesters in 1989.

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