Both China and the West have distorted the truth about the Tiananmen Square protests and the massacre that followed

By focusing on the student protests in Tiananmen Square Western liberals ignore the bigger tragedy perpetrated by the Communist Party of China
We all know that China's communist rulers have distorted and denied the truth about what happened 20 years ago in Tiananmen Square. But they aren't the only ones. In an equally disturbing betrayal of history, Western human rights activists and liberal commentators have also spun the story of Tiananmen, creating a fairytale version of events that bears little relation to what happened in those bloody days of June 1989.
Twenty years on, the Communist Party of China (CPC) continues to play down or deny the seriousness of the protests and massacre. It insultingly refers to the events as the "4 June Incident". It claims that "only" 241 people died, including soldiers, when experts put the figure at between 800 and 1,500. It denies Chinese citizens access to information about the events: search for "Tiananmen Square massacre" on the internet in China and you'll be told: "This page cannot be found."
Western human rights groups have not indulged in such denialism, but they have employed much mythmaking of their own, airbrushing from history what they consider to be inconvenient facts and creating a neat but terribly skewed morality tale about June 1989.
The main victims were workers in Beijing suburbs - now forgotten by the WestThanks to the images propagated by groups like Amnesty and Human Rights Watch, most Westerners think the Tiananmen Square Massacre involved Chinese soldiers shooting pro-democracy students in the central square of Beijing. The most famous image from the protests - that of a student standing in front of tanks - strengthens the idea that was a simple Students vs Soldiers story. This is unforgivably inaccurate.
It is of course true that in May and June 1989 many students set up camp in Tiananmen, where they demanded democratic and economic reforms, and that some of them suffered when the CPC launched its military clampdown on 3 and 4 June. Yet there were uprisings across Beijing, and in other parts of China, and the main victims of the state violence - now largely forgotten thanks to Western human rights activism - were not students in the square, but ordinary workers miles away in the suburbs of Beijing.
The Chinese authorities sent their tanks to crush a workers' rebellion. In their fascinating book Black Hands of Beijing: Lives of Defiance in China's Democracy Movement, human rights experts George Black and Robin Munro wrote: "What took place was the slaughter not of students but of ordinary workers and residents - precisely the target that the Chinese government had intended."
Black and Munro point out that the workers of Beijing, whose lives had become harsher as a result of Premier Deng Xiaoping's introduction of crude market reforms from the late 1970s onwards, had "much more to be angry about than the students", and the CPC's aim was to "crush them".
The worst state violence occurred miles away from Tiananmen Square in the western suburbs of Beijing, where, as China expert
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well this is all normal for the socialist media reporting on socialist atrocities. the USSR was a great place to be except for the gulags and the starvation and the KGB, but the socialist media never yet have told the truth about it all, the writers and poets and bourgois capitalist economists have done a thousand times more truth-telling on this than the reality-denying socialist BBC and the Guardianistas.
Posted by michael jose at 11:01am on June 4, 2009
As soon as I mentioned the name of Han Suyin I was cut off. Was this accidental or is there indeed a blanket ban on this highly respected authoress who was in Beijing during these events? Try finding her on the internet! She alleges that the whole events were a put-up job paid for by a certain well-known Hungarian billionaire who flew out as soon as things turned ugly. You agree with her in saying that the students were mere pawns in these events. The main instigators of violence were paid hoodlums who were described at the time as "strikers", in spite of the fact that there was no known strike taking place. They were responsible for killing the first soldiers to arrive and who were armed with broomhandles, thereby escalating events. As I said before, try to find Han Suyin about this business on the web and you will find that she has been "disappeared". Free press indeed!
Posted by dennis parkes at 7:51pm on June 4, 2009
Dear me, two nutcases with deranged claims already... michael jose, only ludicrously challenged American neofascists call the BBC socialist, and the Guardian is a wooly liberal paper, never has been left wing, although they do attempt to get to the truth. Dennis parkes, cut off from where? you appear to be paid by the Chinese government to spread disinformation. This article nowhere says the students were pawns, but in your fevered imagination I suppose saying 'many students set up camp in Tiananmen, where they demanded democratic and economic reforms' looks like it to you though. Soldiers armed with broomhandles... my oh my! On the subject of the article however, perhaps the West did distort, but perhaps it was due to the difficulty of getting information about what was happening out of a closed police state, rather than deliberate distortion, as the Chinese state was clearly doing, and still does.
Posted by Peter Simmons at 11:22am on July 14, 2009
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