Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
1989-nien 2 chʻun 1 hsia 4 chih 1-chiao 1 te 0 cheng 4-chih 4 feng 1-po 1: IPA [í.tɕjòʊ.pá.tɕjòʊ.njɛ̌n ʈʂʰwə́n ɕjâ ʈʂɻ̩́.tɕjáʊ tɤ ʈʂə̂ŋ] Wu; Romanization: 1989-ni tshen-ghô tsy-jiau di tsen-tsy fhon-bo: Yue: Cantonese; Yale Romanization: 1989-nìhn cheūnhaah jígáau dī jingchìh fūngbō: Jyutping: 1989 ...
Chinese scholars Liu Liming and Sheng Qiwen state that censorship helps to protect national information security as well as prevent in the disclosure and infringement of any important national or personal information. [21] Song Minlei points out that censorship is conducive to the maintenance of China's "ideological security."
Due to the severe censorship, most of the younger generation in China, such as Chinese university students, are totally ignorant of the protests in 1989 and the government crackdown on 4 June 1989. Speaker of the United States House of Representatives, Nancy Pelosi , caricatured this by saying that young Chinese thought that ' Tank Man ' was ...
Hundreds, including Alex Chow, former student leader of the Umbrella Movement, attended a vigil in New York's Washington Square Park in New York. "Liberate Hong Kong" banners were seen. [31] Activists organised a candlelit vigil outside the Chinese embassy in Vancouver, British Columbia. Award-winning filmmaker Jevons Au attended. [34]
In just one shot, the photographer, Jeff Widener, managed to convey a society struggling between the freedoms of individual citizens and the heavy hand of the Chinese militarized state. It’s ...
During the period prior to martial law, the Chinese were less dependent on foreign media broadcasts as demonstrated by a rise in newspapers sales and an increase in television and radio audiences. [20] The VOA, among other sources, used official Chinese news media as a listed source of information on 25% of its stories during the protests. [21]
The 1989 Tiananmen Square protests and massacre were the first of their type shown in detail on Western television. [1] The Chinese government's response was denounced, particularly by Western governments and media. [2] Criticism came from both Western and Eastern Europe, North America, Australia and some east Asian and Latin American countries.
The protests commemorated victims of the Chinese Communist Party crackdown on the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989. Activities included the state of alert within mainland China, and the traditional marches and candlelight vigils that took place in Hong Kong and Macau on 4 June 2013 which have taken place every year prior to that since 1990.