Somebody Is Tweeting A Minute-By-Minute
Account Of Tiananmen Square, And It's Gripping
- Jun. 3, 2014, 5:37 PM, Business
Insider
An expert on China is tweeting an absolutely
gripping, minute-by-minute account of the bloody Tiananmen Square protests that erupted 25 years
ago in the heart of Beijing.
The pro-democracy protests, led mostly by
unarmed students, lasted weeks but came to a head on June 3 and June 4 of 1989.
on June 4, Chinese troops fired at civilians, killing more than 1,000, according
to some estimates. Many others were injured, arrested, or even executed for
taking part in the demonstrations.
Now that it's technically June 4 in China,
international affairs expert and
professor Patrick Chovanec is
"live-tweeting" the events of 25 years ago. Here are some of his recent tweets.
Visit his
Twitter feed to see the entire minute-by-minute
account.
June 4, 1989, 4:30am - There is fierce
controversy over whether any students were in tents when APCs ran them over
pic.twitter.com/PNyVUYafEB
— Patrick Chovanec (@prchovanec) June 3, 2014
![View image on Twitter View image on Twitter](https://pbs.twimg.com/media/BpO6ACuIAAAzvHO.jpg)
June 4, 1989, 4:30am -
Armored vehicle topples the "Goddess of Democracy"
in Tiananmen Square
![View image on Twitter View image on Twitter](https://pbs.twimg.com/media/BpO7pvKIIAAHrwG.jpg)
June 4, 1989, 4:30am - APCs
crush student tents in Tiananmen Square. There appears
to be a body at bottom
left.
![View image on Twitter View image on Twitter](https://pbs.twimg.com/media/BpO8vhAIQAAXpCI.jpg)
June 4, 1989, 4:45am -
Infantryman Cui Guozheng is stabbed, lynched, and burned
at Chongwenmen intersection
![View image on Twitter View image on Twitter](https://pbs.twimg.com/media/BpO9TYeIMAAz6mq.jpg)
June 4, 1989, 4:45am - 2
foreign witnesses say Cui shot into a
crowd, killing an elderly
woman, a man, & a small girl
![View image on Twitter View image on Twitter](https://pbs.twimg.com/media/BpO9q16IIAAS1vo.jpg)
June 4, 1989, 5:00am -
Soldiers herd remaining students off of Monument to
People's Heroes and onto
the Square
![View image on Twitter View image on Twitter](https://pbs.twimg.com/media/BpO-cOOIgAAc7ED.jpg)
June 4, 1989, 5:00am - APC
machine gunners keep watch as remaining students are
herded out of Tiananmen
Square
![View image on Twitter View image on Twitter](https://pbs.twimg.com/media/BpO-9QwIYAAgdtP.jpg)
June 4, 1989, 5:00am -
Truck filled w/armed soldiers watches as remaining
students are herded out of
Tiananmen Square
![View image on Twitter View image on Twitter](https://pbs.twimg.com/media/BpPAj1VCEAEl35W.jpg)
June 4, 1989, 5:15am -
Students are herded out of SE corner of Tiananmen Square.
A handful shout brave
slogans
![View image on Twitter View image on Twitter](https://pbs.twimg.com/media/BpPA32CCQAAjMnm.png)
June 4, 1989, 5:15am - APCs
advance on a holdout group of 200 students reluctant
to leave Tiananmen Square
The protests
began in April of 1989, after the death of ousted General Secretary Hu
Yaobang.
AP
Chinese police try in vain to
contain a huge crowd of student marchers during a pro-reform demonstration in
Beijing, China, May 4 1989. (AP Photo/S. Mikami)
Many saw Hu as a reformer.
He had the support of students, who wanted the Chinese government to continue
his pro-market and pro-democracy policies.
AP
A truck is almost buried in
people as it makes its way through the crowd of thousands gathered in Tiananmen
Square for a pro-democracy rally, Wednesday, May 17, 1989, Beijing, China. (AP
Photo/Sadayuki Mikami)
Following Hu's official
state funeral, some 100,000 students gathered in the Beijing's central
square.
AP
Beijing university students wave
fists and flags as five Chinese military helicopters buss Tiananmen Square at
down Sunday, May 21 1989. (AP Photo/stf)
An anti-protest editorial in
People's Daily on April 26 enraged the students further.
AP
Unidentified Beijing University
students, who have been on a five day hunger strike for democracy, take an early
morning break in Tiananmen Square, Thursday, May 18, 1989, Beijing, China. The
students have been joined by thousands of workers, soldiers and doctors in their
demand for political reform. (AP Photo/Kathy Wilhelm)
(Here's the full translation)
By May 13, a hunger strike
had begun and the crowd had grown to 300,000 people.
AP
Unidentified Beijing University
students catch a nap on cases of soft drinks in Tiananmen Square, Friday, May,
19, 1989, Beijing, China. They are in their sixth day of a hunger strike for
political reform. (AP Photo/Kathy Wilhelm)
Martial Law was declared on
May 20.
AP
Beijing University students rally
in Tiananmen Square where they have camped for a week to push for political
reforms, Saturday, May 20, 1989, Beijing, China. The government declared martial
law on Saturday in an effort to end the occupation. (AP Photo/Sadayuki
Mikami)
The People's Liberation Army
(China's military) marched on Beijing, only to withdraw a few days later.
Protestors would lecture the soldiers, asking them to join their
cause.
AP
A Beijing University student
reads list of goals in their occupation of Tiananmen Square to Peoples
Liberation Army troops, Saturday, May 20, 1989, Beijing, China. The troops,
enroute to the square, were turned back by the crowds. (AP Photo/Mark
Avery)
The student protest became
split around this time, with no clear leader.
AP
A Chinese military helicopter
passes over Tiananmen Square and demonstrating students following the
declaration of martial law, Saturday, May 20, 1989, Beijing, China. Students
have occupied the square for a week seeking political reform. (AP Photo/Sadayuki
Mikami)
But the students and their
supporters were clearly occupying Beijing's central square.
AP
Beijing University students
listen as a strike spokesman details plans for a rally in Tiananmen Square,
which they have occupied for the last two weeks, Sunday, May 28, 1989, Beijing,
China. (AP Photo/Jeff Widener)
They even unloaded a 30-foot
styrofoam statue, modeled on the Statue of Liberty, in the square.
AP
A statue modelled after the
Statiue of Liberty is ready for unveiling in Tiananmen Square, Beijing, China,
May 30, 1989. The 30-foot styrofoam statue was erected by striking university
students. In the background is the Great hall. (AP
photo/Shing)
Protestors mocked government
"bribes" for pro-government marches.
AP
A masked protester from Beijing
University leads chants making fun of the government's offer of money and a loaf
of bread to people willing to march in a pro-government rally, Friday, June 2,
1989, Beijing, China. (AP Photo/Mark Avery)
Troops began clearing the
square at the start of June.
AP
A student pro-democracy protester
flashes victory signs to the crowd as People's Liberation Army troops withdraw
on the west side of the Great Hall of the People near Tiananmen Square on
Saturday, June 3, 1989 in Beijing. (AP Photo/Mark
Avery)
Protestors resisted.
AP Photo/Jeff
Widener
A young woman is caught between
civilians and Chinese soldiers, who were trying to remove her from an assembly
near the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, June 3, 1989.
Most were unarmed but some
had rocks and other weapons.
AP Photo/Jeff
Widener
Civilians hold rocks as they
stand on a government armored vehicle near Chang'an Boulevard in Beijing, early
June 4, 1989.
Violence
erupted.
AP
A student protester puts
barricades in the path of an already burning armored personnel carrier that
rammed through student lines during an army attack on anti-government
demonstrators in Beijing's Tiananmen Square, early June 4, 1989. A govenment
soldier who escaped the armored vehicle was killed by demonstrators.
Pro-democracy protesters occupied the square for seven weeks; hundreds died in
the early hours of June 4, 1989 when troops shot their way through Beijing's
streets to retake the square. (AP Photo/Jeff
Widener)
Officially, 241 people
died.
AP
The bodies of dead civilians lie
among mangled bicycles near Beijing's Tiananmen Square in this June 4, 1989 file
photo.
(Source: PBS)
Other numbers, ranging into
the thousands, have circulated, with none confirmed. Many of the deaths happened
outside the square, with soldiers firing directly at unarmed
protesters.
AP
A ceremony of PIA troops march
down Chanan Blvd. firing indiscriminately to clear the street of citizens as the
army faction occupying the center of Beijing prepares for the rumored arrival of
opposition troops converging on the city, June 5, 1989, Beijing, China. (AP
Photo)
(Source: PBS)
Many more were injured.
REUTERS/Shunsuke
Akatsuka
A blood-covered protester holds a
Chinese soldier's helmet following violent clashes with military forces during
the 1989 pro-democracy demonstrations in Beijing's Tiananmen Square in this June
4, 1989 file photo.
The iconic footage of a man
standing up to a PLA tank occurred the next day.
AP
A Chinese man stands alone to
block a line of tanks heading east on Beijing's Cangan Blvd. in Tiananmen Square
on June 5, 1989. The man, calling for an end to the recent violence and
bloodshed against pro-democracy demonstrators, was pulled away by bystanders,
and the tanks continued on their way. The Chinese government crushed a
student-led demonstration for democratic reform and against government
corruption, killing hundreds, or perhaps thousands of demonstrators in the
strongest anti-government protest since the 1949 revolution. Ironically, the
name Tiananmen means "Gate of Heavenly Peace". (AP Photo/Jeff
Widener)
This shot shows the man from
another angle. He was reportedly whisked aside by onlookers, but it was unclear
what became of him or who he was.
AP
In this photo taken on June 5,
1989 and made available for the first time by the AP on Thursday June 4, 2009,
three unidentified men flee the scene, as a Chinese man, background left, stands
alone to block a line of approaching tanks, background right, in Beijing's
Tiananmen Square.
(Source: PBS)
Tens of thousands of people
were arrested after the protests, and an unknown number were likely
executed.
AP
Crowds of curious Beijing
residents gather to look at the military hardware in Tiananmen Square Wednesday,
June 7, 1989 in Beijing. (AP Photo/Sadayuki Mikami)
(Source: PBS)
Officially China still tries
to ignore the legacy of the event, with searches on the popular Chinese
microblogging site Weibo banned today.
AP
A student is carried away from
Tiananmen Square in Beijing, China, June 8 1989 , following a clash with Chinese
army troops. (AP photo/Liu Heung Shing)
(Source: BI)
On Friday, five Chinese
dissidents testified before U.S. lawmakers about the horror of seeing friends
shot dead 25 years ago.
AP
Chinese soldiers clean up the
debris from several days of rioting against material law in the streets, Friday,
June 9, 1989, Beijing, China. (AP Photo/Sadayuki Mikami)
(Source: USA Today)
Other Chinese people
remember the massacre as it was filtered through the country's state-run TV
stations.
AP
Bicyclists peddle through the
ruins of the last weeks battle between the Peoples Liberation Army and students
demonstrating for democracy in Tiananmen Square, June 10, 1989, Beijing, China.
This scene is located some three miles from the square. (AP Photo/Jeff
Widener)
(Source: New York Times)
The novelist Murong Xuecun
recently wrote that China's president President Xi Jinping may be more paranoid
than those who came before him.
AP
Beijing residents have something
new to look at as they commute to work Monday, June 12, 1989 past a PLA tank
near Tiananmen Square, Beijng. (AP Photo/Sakayuki Mikami)
(Source: New York Times)
Despite the paranoia on
mainland China, there are still relatively robust protests in Hong Kong. "We
will never forget the Tiananmen massacre, because until now there's been no
justice," one woman reportedly said while marching through Hong
Kong.
Tiananmen Square
Protests
Protesters wearing headbands with
a slogan reading "Denounce butcher regime" attend a candlelight vigil outside
the Chinese liaison office in Hong Kong Tuesday, June 3, 2014, to mark the 25th
anniversary of China's crackdown on pro-democracy protests on Tiananmen Square
on June 4.
(Source: ABC Radio)
Now check out all the words
vaguely related to Tiananmen Square.