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Silence in Beijing on 30th Tiananmen anniversary

A lone demonstrator halts a column of tanks at Tiananmen Square, the day after Chinese troops fired on pro-democracy students
A lone demonstrator halts a column of tanks at Tiananmen Square, the day after Chinese troops fired on pro-democracy students

China has marked 30 years since the deadly Tiananmen Square crackdown with a wall of silence and extra security after arresting activists and tightening internet censorship ahead of the politically sensitive anniversary.

Police checked the identification cards of every tourist and commuter leaving the subway near the square, the site of the pro-democracy protests that were brutally extinguished by tanks and soldiers on 4 June, 1989.

Foreign journalists were not allowed onto the square at all or warned by police not to take pictures.

The United States marked the occasion by hailing the "heroic" movement of 1989 and denouncing a "new wave of abuses" in China.

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But in China the Communist Party made sure that the anniversary remained in the distant past, detaining several activists in the run-up to 4 June, while popular live streaming sites conspicuously shut down for "technical" maintenance.

Over the years, the party has censored any discussion of the protests and crackdown, which left hundreds, possibly more than 1,000, dead, ensuring that people either never learn about what happened or fear detention if they dare discuss it openly.

An archive picture, dated 13 May 1989, shows leader of the student protests Wuer Kaixi in Tiananmen Square

The party and its high-tech police apparatus have tightened control over civil society since President Xi Jinping took office in 2012, rounding up activists, rights lawyers and even Marxist students who sympathised with labour movements.

Countless surveillance cameras are perched on lampposts in and around Tiananmen Square.

"It's not that we don't care. We know what happened," said a driver for the DiDi ride-hailing service who was born in 1989.

"But how can I tell you, the DiDi app is recording our conversation in the car," he said. "But today's China has changed. If you have money you have everything. Without money you dare not open your mouth."

It was largely business as usual at Tiananmen this morning.

Hundreds of people, including children waving small Chinese flags while sitting on their parents' shoulders, lined up at the security checkpoint before dawn to watch the daily flag-raising at the square.

But the line moved slowly due to extra security -- with IDs matched on facial recognition screens -- and dozens were unable to watch the event.

When asked whether it crossed her mind that she was visiting the square on the 30th anniversary, a nursing school graduate in her 20s from eastern Shandong province said, "What do you mean? No, it didn't cross my mind."

Her mother jumped in to say: "We don't think of that past."

But there were rare public acknowledgements of 4 June this year.

China's defence minister, General Wei Fenghe, on Sunday defended the crackdown as the "correct" policy to end "political turbulence" at the time.

The nationalistic state-run tabloid Global Times hailed the government's handling of Tiananmen as a "vaccination" for Chinese society that "will greatly increase China's immunity against any major political turmoil in the future".

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo sharply disagreed on how China has evolved as he hailed the "heroic protest movement" in a statement for the anniversary.

"Over the decades that followed, the United States hoped that China's integration into the international system would lead to a more open, tolerant society. Those hopes have been dashed," Mr Pompeo said amid a tense US-China showdown on trade.

Mr Pompeo denounced the "new wave of abuses" by China, including the mass incarceration of Uighur Muslims in the far-west Xinjiang region, and urged a full account of what happened 30 years ago.

China dismissed Mr Pompeo's comments as "lunatic ravings and babbling nonsense".

His statement "maliciously attacks China's political system, denigrates the state of China's human rights and religious affairs, wantonly criticises China's Xinjiang policy and severely interferes in China's domestic affairs", foreign ministry spokesman Geng Shuang said.

The European Union added its voice to criticism of the official amnesia over the bloody crackdown.

"Acknowledgement of these events, and of those killed, detained or missing in connection with the Tiananmen Square protests, is important for future generations and for the collective memory," said a statement from EU diplomatic chief Federica Mogherini.

In spring 1989, students and workers gathered at Tiananmen Square -- the symbolic heart of Chinese power -- demanding democratic change and an end to corruption, inspiring protests across the country.

After seven weeks of demonstrations, the government deployed tanks and soldiers who chased and killed demonstrators and onlookers in the streets leading to the square on 4 June.

"We never expected that," Wang Dan, who was a 20-year-old protest leader in 1989, told AFP in a recent interview in a Washington suburb.

"To open fire on people, that was beyond our expectations," said Mr Wang, who ended up on the government's most wanted list and was imprisoned before going into exile.

Authorities have still not said what really happened or how many were killed that day.

And the quieting of dissident voices continues. Among the string of activists recently detained or "disappeared" are six artists who had put up a painting and performance art exhibition titled "A Conscience Movement" in the eastern city of Nanjing.

Separately, folk singer Li Zhi, who had written and performed songs about the Tiananmen crackdown, was reportedly missing, with his music and accounts on Chinese social media no longer available.

"There is no reason to be optimistic for China now if you look at what's happening," another Tiananmen protest leader, Zhou Fengsuo, told AFP in New York.

"It's darkening day by day, (what) was unimaginable a year ago, now it's becoming reality. Even '1984', the novel, couldn't go that far."