Reading Time: 1 minute
This is Part 2 of a 2-Part series. Part 1 covered events that led to unrest among people. This part covers how that unrest turned into protests, which led to the massacre, in which an estimated 1000+ people died?No official figures are available..
- Unrest among people created a divide within the government.
- Hu Yaobang (General Secretary) was in favour of political liberalisation and the pro-reform masses loved him.
- By 1986, the unrest turned into small protests (led by students), which started spreading across big cities; the government began seeing it as Cultural Revolution-style turmoil.
- Yaobang, accused of being too soft on these protests, was forced to resign in 1987.
- He died on April 15, 1989 and students gathered in large numbers at Tiananmen Square to mourn his death; they believed his forced resignation was responsible for his death.
- Soon, the mourners became protestors & their leaders demanded a dialogue with the government; Tiananmen Square became the hub for their protest.
- The party, having seen Cultural Revolution, saw anyone who was against the government as a danger to the society and published an editorial in a publication that such disturbances will not be tolerated.
- The editorial enraged the students & they demanded its withdrawal and protests escalated.
- Lack of response from the government led to a few hundred students going on hunger strike.
- A few of these students began fainting within a few days and their movement gained public sympathy and people in Beijing rushed to the Square to bring them food.
- The government imposed curfew in Beijing but students ignored it.
- On 3rd June, Beijing’s municipal warned people to stay away from Tiananmen Square for their own safety.
- In the night of 3rd-4th June, over 200,000 Chinese soldiers moved into the square & began firing at students and residents who had gathered at the Square.
- Early morning of 4th June, the troops took control of the Square and sealed the failure of the protest.
- Even after more than 30 years, it is not allowed to mark the anniversary in China; vigils, however, are held in Hong Kong every year.
Image courtesy of Picture by Michael Mandiberg through Flickr