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Xi Zhongxun, the father of Xi Jinping, was a high-ranking Communist official under Mao. He fell from grace but later returned ...
14h
Agence France-Presse on MSNOne of Hong Kong's last opposition parties says it will disbandHong Kong's League of Social Democrats, one of the city's last remaining opposition parties after a five-year political ...
ABC News Australia on MSN24d
Leaked files reveal how China is using AI to erase the history of the Tiananmen Square massacreHundreds of pages of secret documents leaked to the ABC provide a rare glimpse into how human censors and AI erase references to Beijing's violent crackdown on pro-democracy protesters in 1989.
Chinese New Zealanders gathered in Auckland on Monday to commemorate the 36th anniversary of the massacre in Beijing.
For most Chinese, the 36th anniversary of a bloody crackdown that ended pro-democracy protests in China has passed like any other weekday. And that’s just how the ruling Communist Party wants it.
The party has tried, with some success, to erase what it calls the “political turmoil” of 1989 from the collective memory.
36 years after the killing of countless peaceful pro-democracy protesters in Beijing, the Chinese government still seeks to erase the memory of the June 1989 Tiananmen Massacre.
Opinion
23don MSNOpinion
COMMENT: On the 36th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square massacre, Benedict Rogers says that the question is not whether China has changed – it hasn’t – but whether the free world has the courage to w ...
The CCP mowed down and machine gunned thousands of unarmed Chinese students during their protests for democracy on June 4th, 1989. Even if you weren't interested in politics or world news, you were ...
The Bulletin had been founded by a critic of the communist regime, Han Dongfang, who worked on China’s railways before he was ...
HONG KONG — A Hong Kong group that advocated for workers rights for decades announced its shutdown abruptly on Thursday, citing financial difficulties and debt issues. China Labor Bulletin planned to ...
Not a word about the massacre is mentioned, even in Hong Kong, and the Chinese are less free today than they were in 1989.
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