As many as 10,000 student pro-democracy activists killed by People’s Liberation Army on horrific day of bloodshed long since hushed up by China’s authoritarian government

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Today marks the 31st anniversary of the Tiananmen Square Massacre in Beijing.
Remembered in China more euphemistically as the 4 June incident, the events of that day in early summer 1989 are among the bloodiest in modern political history.
Hundreds of civilians were killed by the 200,000-strong Peoples Liberation Army in a brutal crackdown on student pro-democracy protesters that sent shockwaves around the world.
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The military had been called in after Deng Xiaopings governing Communist Party of China (CPC) declared martial law in the capital, seeking to end six weeks of nationwide demonstrations.
One million Chinese youth had occupied the famous landmark to stage hunger strikes and call for an end to state corruption, greater transparency and increased civil liberties following the death of reform-minded party leader Hu Yaobang on 15 April.
The demonstrations in Tiananmen Square were proving an embarrassment to the Chinese government ahead of the visit of Soviet premier Mikhail Gorbachev, whose arrival would pull China into the global media spotlight, hence the sudden urgency to clear the streets.
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Tiananmen Square massacre: Timeline of events
1/12 Man blocks tank
A tank driving down a road nearby Tiananmen Square is blocked by an unidentified man on 5 June. The picture is seen around the globe as a protest against the previous days events, when tensions that had been building for months came to a head…
2/12 Hu Yaobang dies – 15 April
Former general secretary of the Communist Party Hu Yaobang dies aged 73 of a heart attack. He was a leading reformer of the Chinese system who the public saw to be unfairly removed from government. Citizens flock to Tiananmen Square to mourn him. Mourning soon turns to anger as they dwell on the state of China.
3/12 Protests spread – 17 April
In the days after Hu’s death, university students around China are organising. On 17 April, thousands of students march on Tiananmen Square to demand democracy and greater freedoms.
4/12 “We must a clear stand against disturbances” – 26 April
So begins the editorial on the front page of the People’s Daily, the Chinese state newspaper, on 26 April. The editorial goes on to attack the protesters as anti-party and anti-government. Protesters read a clear message that the government is against them and call for the editorial to be retracted.
5/12 Protests spread further – 4 May
Thousands more students in five cities across China join the protests. Head of the Communist Party Zhao Ziyang tells a meeting of bankers that the protests are sure to subside. Pictured are journalists from the China Daily newspaper showing support in Tiananmen Square. Protesters were calling for freedom of the press, among other rights common to democracies
6/12 Hunger strikes begin – 13 May
Hundreds of students begin hunger strikes, upping the stakes of the protests. Pictured: Paramedics remove a student protester who has been on hunger strike on 17 May 1989
7/12 Zhao visits Tiananmen Square – 19 May
Now doubting that the strikes will subside without intervention from the government, party head Zhao Ziyang visits Tiananmen Square and urges students to end the hunger strike. Chinese premier Li Peng briefly joins Zhao but leaves soon after arriving. Zhao was removed from office later in the day.
8/12 Martial law declared – 20 May
Chinese premier Li Peng declares martial law. Soldiers move in on Tiananmen Square but many are held up by protesters. Soldiers are ordered not to fire on civilians.
9/12 Protests continue – 22 May to 1 June
On 22 May, a military helicopter drops leaflets above Tiananmen Square that instruct protesters to leave immediately. Despite this, protests continue while the army withdraws.
10/12 Soldiers move in to clear the square – 3 June
On the evening of 3 June, soldiers advance with force. Protesters are warned that the troops have the right to use any methods necessary to clear the square.
11/12 Soldiers open fire – 4 June
In the early hours of the morning, some troops begin to shoot dead protesters who defy their efforts to clear the square. Pictured: A man is covered in blood after the People’s Liberation Army open fire on protesters in Tiananmen Square
12/12 Man blocks tank – 5 June
A tank driving down a road nearby Tiananmen Square is blocked by an unidentified man. The picture is seen around the globe as a protest against the previous days events.
1/12 Man blocks tank
A tank driving down a road nearby Tiananmen Square is blocked by an unidentified man on 5 June. The picture is seen around the globe as a protest against the previous days events, when tensions that had been building for months came to a head…
2/12 Hu Yaobang dies – 15 April
Former general secretary of the Communist Party Hu Yaobang dies aged 73 of a heart attack. He was a leading reformer of the Chinese system who the public saw to be unfairly removed from government. Citizens flock to Tiananmen Square to mourn him. Mourning soon turns to anger as they dwell on the state of China.
3/12 Protests spread – 17 April
In the days after Hu’s death, university students around China are organising. On 17 April, thousands of students march on Tiananmen Square to demand democracy and greater freedoms.
4/12 “We must a clear stand against disturbances” – 26 April
So begins the editorial on the front page of the People’s Daily, the Chinese state newspaper, on 26 April. The editorial goes on to attack the protesters as anti-party and anti-government. Protesters read a clear message that the government is against them and call for the editorial to be retracted.
5/12 Protests spread further – 4 May
Thousands more students in five cities across China join the protests. Head of the Communist Party Zhao Ziyang tells a meeting of bankers that the protests are sure to subside. Pictured are journalists from the China Daily newspaper showing support in Tiananmen Square. Protesters were calling for freedom of the press, among other rights common to democracies
6/12 Hunger strikes begin – 13 May
Hundreds of students begin hunger strikes, upping the stakes of the protests. Pictured: Paramedics remove a student protester who has been on hunger strike on 17 May 1989
7/12 Zhao visits Tiananmen Square – 19 May
Now doubting that the strikes will subside without intervention from the government, party head Zhao Ziyang visits Tiananmen Square and urges students to end the hunger strike. Chinese premier Li Peng briefly joins Zhao but leaves soon after arriving. Zhao was removed from office later in the day.
8/12 Martial law declared – 20 May
Chinese premier Li Peng declares martial law. Soldiers move in on Tiananmen Square but many are held up by protesters. Soldiers are ordered not to fire on civilians.
9/12 Protests continue – 22 May to 1 June
On 22 May, a military helicopter drops leaflets above Tiananmen Square that instruct protesters to leave immediately. Despite this, protests continue while the army withdraws.
10/12 Soldiers move in to clear the square – 3 June
On the evening of 3 June, soldiers advance with force. Protesters are warned that the troops have the right to use any methods necessary to clear the square.
11/12 Soldiers open fire – 4 June
In the early hours of the morning, some troops begin to shoot dead protesters who defy their efforts to clear the square. Pictured: A man is covered in blood after the People’s Liberation Army open fire on protesters in Tiananmen Square
12/12 Man blocks tank – 5 June
A tank driving down a road nearby Tiananmen Square is blocked by an unidentified man. The picture is seen around the globe as a protest against the previous days events.
After initially trying to use non-violent methods to disperse the demonstrators and then telling them they had one hour in which to leave, members of the 27th Group Army opened fire on the crowd with automatic rifles just five minutes later. Snipers rained down bullets from rooftops, troops bayoneted the injured and armoured personnel carriers rolled in, many of which ran over students who had linked arms to form human chains.
The bodies were cleared away by bulldozers for incineration and blood was hosed into the gutters. The wounded were raced to hospital in bicycle rickshaws.
While the CPC insisted the massacre was necessary to avoid a counter-revolutionary riot, then US president George HW Bush denounced the violence and prime minister Margaret Thatcher said she was shocked and appalled.
China officially recorded the number of dead as no more than 300 while the Chinese Red Cross on the ground said it was more like 2,700. But Sir Alan Donald, Britains ambassador to China at the time, said the death toll was much higher.
Writing in a contemporary memo that was only declassified in 2017, Sir Alan expressed his belief that the number of dead was really 10,454 and suggested that the 27th Group Army, 60 per cent illiterate and called primitives, had been especially chosen for the task because of its reputation for unquestioning obedience.
In another piece of recently declassified correspondence, the same diplomat had warned Downing Street that the massacre was inevitable. The Chinese government has decided that there is no way to avoid bloodshed, he wrote 20 May 1989.
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Tiananmen Square is most commonly remembered for the Tank Man, one of the most iconic protest images ever recorded: a lone man holding two shopping bags standing immovable in the path of four tanks.
This extraordinary moment was captured by five foreign press photographers from a hotel balconies looking down on the horrors below. Stuart Franklins version appeared in Time and Life magazines after the roll of film was smuggled out of China inside a box of tea. Charlie Cole, whose picture won the 1990 World Press Photo of the year, only managed to get his film out after concealing it inside a toilet when the authorities raided his room, forcing him to surrender a dummy roll and sign a confession that he had taken photographs in contravention of martial law. Stuart Wideners picture for AP was the most widely distributed.
The Tank Man has been identified as 19-year-old archaeology student Wang Weilin, but his fate remains unknown. General secretary Jiang Zemin denied any knowledge of his arrest but insisted he would not have been run over or subsequently executed. Some believe he escaped to Taiwan.
His story was made the subject of Lucy Kirkwoods play Chimerica in 2013.
Today, Tiananmen Square is never mentioned in Chinese media and is not taught in schools. A heightened police presence at the site is the only tacit nod to what occurred there 29 years previously.
The current US secretary of state, Mike Pompeo, has however called on China to make a full public accounting of those killed, detained or missing.
Chinese artist Badiucao has also inspired a social media campaign to mark the anniversary, encouraging young people around the world to dress as the Tank Man and pose in front of significant landmarks to express their opposition to Chinas still authoritarian government. The bags they brandish commonly feature images of the childrens cartoon characters Winnie the Pooh and Peppa Pig, both outlawed by Beijing.