Thursday, June 4, 2009

Taipei Times Editorial: Democracy in whose words?

As the 20th anniversary of these tragic events passes, Taiwanese may soon find themselves faced with a crucial decision on how close they want to get to China. But whatever they decide, they must ensure that any rapprochement respects the time-honored conceptions of “democracy” and “human rights,” and not the sophistry of the KMT or the CCP.

TIANANMEN 20 YEARS ON: Beijing brushes off calls for probe

China yesterday rejected calls for a probe into the Tiananmen Square Massacre, saying that the matter had been settled.

TIANANMEN 20 YEARS ON: Ma calls on China to face ‘painful’ past

President Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) yesterday lauded China’s efforts to address human rights issues but called on Beijing to face the “painful history” of its bloody military crackdown on demonstrations at Tiananmen Square in 1989.

China's Tiananmen anniversary

Jun 4 - There was tight security on the 20th anniversary of a military crackdown on Tiananmen Square pro-democracy protests on Thursday (June 4, 2009).

Opinion: Tiananmen’s Enduring Challenge

Wang Dan argues that China has changed in 20 years, but the central causes of the student protesters have remained unresolved.

Opinion: Bullets Over Beijing

Twenty years after the events in Tiananmen Square, why is China frozen politically even as it has transformed economically?

After Tiananmen and Prison, a Comfortable but Uneasy Life in the New China

In an interview, Liu Suli, a protester in the pro-democracy Tiananmen Square movement of 1989, tried to reconcile China then and now.

Chinese Activist Tries to Surrender

One of the principal student leaders of the 1989 protests flew to the Chinese territory of Macao, saying he wanted to surrender after two decades in exile.

Tiananmen Square Scars Soldier Turned Artist

Chen Guang, an artist and a former soldier who helped clear Tiananmen Square in 1989, has defied officials to describe his experiences there.