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Fight for Democracy

Chinese asked to fight for democracy as they remember Tiananmen Square

A new museum dedicated to the events of June 1989 will open in Hong Kong this week.

TIANAMEN SQUARE DEMONSTRATION JEFF WIDENER JEFF WIDENER

THE WORLD’S FIRST museum dedicated to the bloody Tiananmen Square crackdown wants to convince Chinese visitors to fight for democracy when it opens in Hong Kong next week.

The permanent exhibition commemorates those killed in the authorities’ brutal crushing of pro-democracy protesters in Beijing on 3-4 June 1989.

All reference to the crackdown is banned on the mainland, where many remain unaware of it.

China Hong Kong Remembering Tiananmen The bodies of dead civilians lie among mangled bicycles near Beijing's Tiananmen Square in this June 4, 1989 file photo. AP / Press Association Images AP / Press Association Images / Press Association Images

The museum is funded by the Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements of China, which also organises the annual 4 June candlelit vigil in Hong Kong attended by tens of thousands.

“A lot of people have forgotten what has happened and mainlanders are not allowed to remember,” the group’s chairman Lee Cheuk-yan told reporters.

“So here, we preserve that memory and remind the people what has happened and also to drive the people to fight for democracy in China.”

By letting them remember and letting them know what actually happened, they will have anger towards the Communist Party – which in order preserve its power, went to the extent of shooting its own people.

“This should not be tolerated by our mainland compatriots,” he said.

China Democracy Protests On 1 June 1989, a young Chinese girl dances during pro-democracy protests on Tiananmen Square. AP / Press Association Images AP / Press Association Images / Press Association Images

Organisers will use social media, including Weibo – China’s equivalent to Twitter – to promote the museum, Lee said.

The 800-square foot venue, in the commercial district of East Tsim Sha Tsui, will display images from the protests and subsequent crackdown, including the famous ‘Tank Man’ photograph of a civilian staring down a long row of military vehicles (top photo).

It also includes a two-metre tall statue of the Goddess of Democracy, similar to one erected at Tiananmen Square during the protests almost 25 years ago.

China Democracy Protests Protesters occupying Beijing's Tiananmen Square work on the statue of the Goddess of Democracy. The makeshift statue was destroyed, and hundreds of people killed, when Chinese soldiers overran the square in the early morning hours of 4 June 1989. AP / Press Association Images AP / Press Association Images / Press Association Images

Owners of the commercial block that houses the museum have threatened to take legal action, saying that the museum may have violated the property deed and may cause nuisance to tenants, due to its highly political nature, according to media reports.

“We have all the legal backup and we are confident we can face legal challenges and this museum will be open continuously,” Lee said.

Beijing has never provided an official final toll for the military crackdown, which was condemned worldwide. Independent observers tallied more than 1,000 dead in Beijing, without including victims elsewhere.

The Chinese Communist Party branded the Tiananmen protests a “counter-revolutionary rebellion” but pro-democracy advocates in Hong Kong have consistently commemorated the incident.

Every year, tens of thousands of residents gather at the city’s Victoria Park to mark its anniversary.

Since returning to Chinese rule in 1997, Hong Kong enjoys a level of civil liberty that is unavailable in China under the so-called “One Country Two Systems”, which guarantees the city’s semi-autonomous status.

- © AFP, 2014

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