Archive for: 06/2008

June 4 remembered in Melbourne

On this 19th anniversary of the 1989 Tiananmen Square crackdown, the people of Melbourne extended their solidarity and support to the Tiananmen Mothers.

Weekly report: Free speech, Beijing-style

One-party rule is here to stay, but cracks are starting to appear, writes Antony Loewenstein.

June 4 killings remembered in Sydney

Activists gathered outside the Chinese Consulate in Camperdown, Sydney this morning. Our right to freedom of expression was challenged but we remained nonetheless.

Hoping history will bring justice

Ding Zilin's only son was shot as he hid, with a classmate, behind a flowerbed not far from Beijing's Tiananmen Square. It was shortly before midnight on 3 June 1989 and he would be one of the first to die.

Airbrushing the past

For almost 20 years Chinese authorities have been doing their best to make history disappear.

World headlines – 4 June 2008

In the latest wrap-up from news outlets and bloggers across the globe:

Journalists and the parents of children who died in the Sichuan earthquake are manhandled by police outside a courthouse, a well-known Beijing lawyer says police grabbed him as he tried to commemorate the Tiananmen crackdown, and Chinese state media report human rights have improved, but not because of any special event or the will of any other country plus …

Almost two decades in jail

Most people have never heard of Wang Jun, Miao Deshun and Liu Zhihua – they are middle-aged men who have spent their entire adult lives in Chinese jails.

Tiananmen Mothers website blocked

Just hours after the Tiananmen Mothers' launched their first ever website, it was blocked by the Chinese Government's ubiquitous censoring engine.

All things Tiananmen

June 3 and 4 this year marks the 19th anniversary of the military crackdown on the democratic protestors in Beijing's Tiananmen Square. Hundreds, and possibly thousands, of people were killed in the crackdown, although it is unlikely a precise number will ever be known.

World headlines – 3 June 2008

In the latest wrap-up from news outlets and bloggers across the globe:

A BBC commentator and former US basketball star will be Amnesty International's official sporting ambassador in Beijing during the Olympics, Journalists are ordered to pull back on stories about schools that collapsed in the Sichuan earthquake, and authorities issue a rulebook for visiting foreigners plus …

Curriculum resource on China and human rights

Amnesty International Australia has just released "China, the Olympics and Human Rights", a teacher and student resource focusing on issues including:

  • Internet censorship
  • the history of the Olympics and human rights
  • human rights defenders in China
  • issues such as the death penalty and detention without trial.

Hong Kong march for Tiananmen

Hundreds of people have marched in silence through Hong Kong to mark this week's 19th anniversary of the military crackdown on the Tiananmen Square demonstrators.

World headlines – 2 June 2008

In the latest wrap-up from news outlets and bloggers across the globe:

Zeng Jinyan, wife of jailed activist Hu Jia, describes the rentless police harassment, Facebook eyes the Chinese market, and the Olympic sponsors push ahead despite having faced some daunting public relations challenges plus …

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