Dokument #1051790
HRW – Human Rights Watch (Autor)
(New York) – The Chinese government’s failure to admit  to the massacre of unarmed civilians in June 1989 continues to arrest  the development of meaningful rule of law in China, Human Rights Watch  said. 
 	
 	June 2012 marks the twenty-third year of the Chinese  government’s ongoing cover-up of the Tiananmen massacre and persecution  of survivors, victims’ relatives, and those who challenge the  government’s narrative about those abuses. 
 	
 	“It’s been more than three decades since the beginning of  the ‘reform and opening’ era in China, yet the government has displayed  little interest in reforming or opening when it comes to the protests  and bloodshed from 1989,” said Sophie Richardson,  China director at Human Rights Watch. “But demands inside China for  meaningful legal reform and accountability are only increasing despite  government resistance.”
 	
 	The April 22, 2012, escape of blind legal rights defender  Chen Guangcheng from 19 months of unlawful detention in Shandong  province and his subsequent temporary relocation to the United States  last month highlights official abuse of the legal system to persecute  those seeking redress for human rights abuses. During  those 19 months, Chen and his family – including his wife, Yuan  Weijing, and his elderly mother – were targeted with physical violence  by local government officials and security forces and denied their  constitutionally guaranteed rights of freedom of movement, expression,  and association.
 	
 	Despite Chinese government assurances that officials  would investigate those abuses, some of Chen’s relatives in Shandong  have been targeted with what Chen describes as “intense pressure” and  intimidation tactics from local government officials. Chen’s nephew,  Chen Kegui, faces charges of attempted murder as the result of what Chen  has described as an act of self defense against thugs wielding pickaxe  handles who allegedly broke into his brother’s home on April 27, 2012.
 	
 	“Chinese authorities repeatedly described Chen as ‘a free  man’ and ‘a normal citizen’ at the same time local officials grossly  abused him and his family,” said Richardson. “Such willful suppression  of the truth is disturbingly consistent with the government’s attitude  towards June 4.”
 	
 	The Tiananmen massacre was precipitated by the mass  gathering of workers, students, and others in Beijing’s Tiananmen Square  and other cities in April 1989 to peacefully demonstrate for a  pluralistic political system. The government responded to the  intensifying protests in late May 1989 by declaring martial law and  authorizing the military to use deadly force. 
 	
 	In response, units of the Chinese military shot and  killed untold numbers of unarmed civilians, many of whom were not  connected to the protests in Beijing and other cities on and around June  3 and 4. Some people in Beijing attacked army convoys and burned  vehicles as the military moved through the city. The Tiananmen Mothers, a  nongovernmental grouping of relatives of Tiananmen massacre victims,  has compiled a list of at least 203 citizens killed in the June 1989  crackdown. The 1989 crackdown extended to major urban centers  across China and included the arrest of thousands of people on  “counter-revolutionary” charges and on criminal charges including  disrupting social order and arson.
 	
 	The Chinese government has refused to account for those  killings or bring the perpetrators to justice. The Chinese Communist  Party initially justified the bloody crackdown as a valid response to a  “counter-revolutionary incident,” later revising its assessment of the  incident as a “political disturbance.” The Chinese government has  steadfastly refused to issue a list of those killed, “disappeared,” or  imprisoned, and has failed to publish verifiable casualty figures. The  government has also consistently stifled any public discussion of the  June 1989 massacre and its aftermath.
 	
 	The government’s refusal to investigate and hold  accountable those responsible for the violent suppression of the June 4  protest movement – much less tolerate public debate on these events –  finds reflection in many serious and ongoing human rights violations  today, including: