The 1989 Tiananmen massacre – as seen by a new generation of watchful eyes

On the anniversary of the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre last weekend, a group of protesters gathered in London’s Trafalgar Square to pay their respects to the victims of the military crackdown by the Chinese army on peaceful pro-democracy protests. 

These protesters were of a similar age to the students they commemorated. 

After decades of political brainwashing under the Chinese Communist Party, which bans any public discussion of the 1989 events, many observers had started to believe that China’s young people had lost touch with the kind of political fervor that gave rise to the student movements of the 1980s. 

Then, the “white paper” protests came, spreading across China in late 2022 in the wake of a fatal fire in Urumqi and after three years of COVID-19 lockdowns, quarantine camps and compulsory daily testing. 

The result was to light up the pro-democracy movement in the diaspora, with young people once more taking to the streets of cities around the world to demand better for China, and to remember those who had gone before them.

Wang Han, 26, currently studying at the University of Southern California 

Wang told RFA Mandarin in a recent interview that the Tiananmen massacre occupies a similar place in his mind to the three years of stringent lockdowns and travel bans of the zero-COVID policy under President Xi Jinping.

Wang, who described himself as deeply involved in the “white paper” movement, said the two are similar because they were the products of the same authoritarian government.

“It’s what I’ve been saying to so many people,” he said. “I think everyone needs to stand together in the face of totalitarian tyranny.”

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“Everyone needs to stand together in the face of totalitarian tyranny,” says Wang Han. Credit: Screenshot from Wang Han video

Wang’s politics have evolved since Xi took power in 2012, and amended the constitution in 2018 to allow himself to rule indefinitely.

Before Xi consolidated power in his own hands, Wang had allowed himself to hope that China might one day relinquish its authoritarian government peacefully, the way Taiwan did in the 1990s, to become a fully functioning democracy.

“Under Jiang Zemin and Hu Jintao, I didn’t support the Chinese Communist Party, but at that time I naively believed that this country would get better, a bit like Taiwan, with everyone moving forward step by step, until finally (Taiwan’s) Democratic Progressive Party was in power,” he said.

“But when Xi Jinping amended the constitution in 2018, that really shocked me,” Wang said. “Then there was the pandemic emerging in Wuhan, and social movements started to inspire me even more.”

Since then, Wang has dropped the belief that China will follow Taiwan’s path to democratization.

“The Communist Party has done a more complete job of destroying grassroots social organizations in China, and it is more totalitarian” than the authoritarian Kuomintang government that once ruled Taiwan, he said.

“I don’t think it is going to evolve away from tyranny through normal demands for reform,” Wang said. “That will only happen through a more determined kind of resistance.”

Looking back, Wang sees scant sign of any political evolution at all in the past 73 years of Communist Party rule in China.

“It doesn’t matter how different the ideas of Xi Jinping and Deng Xiaoping are,” he said. “The Communist Party and Marxism are totalitarian systems, and the totalitarian consciousness is deeply ingrained in them, and in their ideas.”

Xiao Yajie, 23, mainland Chinese who grew up in Hong Kong

Xiao, who is working in Los Angeles, grew up hearing about the Tiananmen massacre in Hong Kong, which still had the freedom to hold annual candlelight gatherings every June 4, in Victoria Park.

But smaller events were also taking place in the city’s schools, away from the eye of the international media.

“Hong Kong’s political direction was still very liberal, and every school would hold June 4 commemorative activities,” she said. “During those years that I was studying in Hong Kong, our school would have spontaneous activities every year, and everyone would go to the auditorium to mourn the students.”

“We would have candlelight evenings all through my elementary and high school years,” Xiao said.

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Xiao Yajie takes part in a rally for the Los Angeles “white paper” movement. Credit: Provided by Xiao Yajie

Back then, Xiao didn’t give it much thought — until 2016, when her parents ran into some tourists from mainland China at a vigil in Victoria Park who denied the massacre had ever happened.

“My parents told me about this, and I realized how much people in mainland China had been deceived,” she said. “This left a deep impression on me.”

When the 2019 protest movement kicked off in Hong Kong, in response to plans to allow extradition of alleged criminal suspects to mainland China, Xiao went back to take part, getting tear gassed by the Hong Kong police, and watching supporters of the Chinese Communist Party throw things at protesters on the street.

Xiao continues to take part in local activism, including during the “white paper” movement, which she found inspiring.

“This is a democratic movement that is better than the 1989 movement, because this group of brave people stood up under huge political pressure [not to],” she said.

“Although some of the people who launched the white paper movement may not even have known about June 4, it carried forward what the university students left undone [in 1989],” Xiao said.

“That yearning for freedom and democracy from the past — it’s actually in our bones.”

Ji Xin, a U.S.-based student from Shanghai in his early 20s

Ji was among the few young people to find out what happened on the night of June 3-4 when the People’s Liberation Army entered Beijing in columns of tanks, firing machine guns at unarmed civilians on the streets and putting a bloody end to weeks of student-led protests on Tiananmen Square.

He first heard adults talking about it when he was just eight years old.

“I was playing on my roller skates in the park,” he said. “As I was taking a rest, I vaguely became aware of some grown-ups talking, saying that there was a demonstration on the streets of Beijing, and the army ‘mopped people up’ with guns and tanks.”

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Civilians stand on a Chinese army armored vehicle near Chang’an Boulevard in Beijing, early June 4, 1989. Credit: Associated Press

Ji asked the adults what they were talking about, and was told to run along and play by himself.

But that didn’t stop him looking into the matter on his own account, one day when he was home alone.

“I found my dad’s computer was on, and found a folder called ‘June 4 Massacre’ on his desktop,” Ji said. 

“I clicked on it and saw many photos of June 4, 1989. Students rushing, photos of protests at the Monument to the People’s Heroes, photos of tank track marks in blood on the streets of Beijing, and photos of crowds marching in front of Tiananmen Gate.”

He shared the information with his classmates, who were just as shocked to hear about it as Ji had been.

“I would often talk to my classmates about June 4 and how it came about, and what happened afterwards,” he said. “I would also listen to songs like ‘Flower of Freedom’ and show them photos and video.”

“I would also print out stuff from Wikipedia and give it to them,” Ji said.

Translated by Luisetta Mudie. Edited by Malcolm Foster.

Shrinking harvest of caterpillar fungus puts squeeze on Tibetan herders

Gathered in the Tibetan highlands, caterpillar fungus can fetch US$18,000 a pound, and in rare cases more than US$50,000 a pound.

It’s a traditional medicine used for centuries to treat heart, liver and lung diseases, high cholesterol, low libido and impotence, despite a lack of scientific evidence.

But during the May peak harvest season this year, collectors have had a harder time finding the slender brown root-like fungus, known as yartsa gunbu, or “summer grass, winter worm,” yarsagumba or Himalayan Viagra.

Tibetans herders who collect the fungus to boost their meager incomes blame a shortage of rain, changing climate and over-harvesting amid rising demand..

“Production is already on the decline every passing year,” a Tibetan living in Kardze’s Dege county told Radio Free Asia. “Before, collectors would easily gather at least 100 pieces of caterpillar fungus, but now the most they can collect is 40 in a day. Some even say they can collect only 10 a day.”

Research published in 2018 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences journal said the decline of caterpillar fungus in the Himalayan region was due to climate change and overharvesting.

A picker digs out a caterpillar fungus, used in traditional medicine, along the Amne Machin mountain range in western China's Qinghai province, in an undated photo. Credit: Reuters file photo
A picker digs out a caterpillar fungus, used in traditional medicine, along the Amne Machin mountain range in western China’s Qinghai province, in an undated photo. Credit: Reuters file photo

Its value jumped during the COVID-19 pandemic as people sought the fungus as treatment for the virus. And prices have also risen as Chinese, Mongolians and others try to get into the business of collecting and selling the fungus, he said.

“That is now making it difficult for everyone to thrive due to limited production,” he said. 

These days, the lower quality fungus sells for about 30 yuan, or US$4.25, each, while the better quality fungus goes for 50-60 yuan (US$7-8.50) each, said a Tibetan who lives in Kardze Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, a Tibetan-populated area of Sichuan province.

In China, where the fungus is highly regarded, its market price increased from US$6,000 to US$9,000 per pound between 1995 and 2015, according to a July 2022 report by Scroll, an Indian digital news publication. Today, the price ranges from US$9,000 to US$18,000 per pound. 

In some rare cases, the highest grade fungus has sold for more than US$50,000, according to reports from Business Insider and National Public Radio.

This year, many collectors are shipping caterpillar fungus to different cities in China and selling them for 50-60 yuan each, said a Tibetan in Malho prefecture, a Tibetan-populated area in Qinghai province.

Local residents search for caterpillar fungus on Laji Mountain in Guide county, western China's Qinghai province, in an undated photo. Credit: Reuters file photo
Local residents search for caterpillar fungus on Laji Mountain in Guide county, western China’s Qinghai province, in an undated photo. Credit: Reuters file photo

Found in high meadows

The fungus, which originates from dead caterpillars, is found on meadowland above 3,500 meters (10,500 feet) in Tibet, parts of China and in the neighboring Himalayan regions of Bhutan and Nepal. 

Called dong chong xia cao in Chinese, its scientific name is Ophiocordyceps sinensis.

The fungus can be consumed directly, added to food or liquids, or ground up for use in traditional medicine. 

“Until 2016, one could easily harvest 15 to 20 pieces of caterpillar fungus in a day, but these days one can hardly collect eight to 10,” said a Tibetan living in Qinghai province, which has Tibetan-populated areas. Like other sources, he declined to give his name so as to speak freely.

The Chinese government has warned Tibetans in Qinghai not to harvest caterpillar fungus, citing reasons such as environmental protection, he said, though other Tibetans report a growing market in China for the product.

“Due to snow and cold weather, it is still difficult in the higher altitude regions to harvest caterpillar fungus so the cost of these caterpillar fungus is most likely to go up as harvesting will peak by the end of May,” said the Tibetan.  

A buyer weighs a pile of caterpillar fungus on Laji Mountain in Guide county, western China's Qinghai province, in an undated photo. Credit: Reuters file photo
A buyer weighs a pile of caterpillar fungus on Laji Mountain in Guide county, western China’s Qinghai province, in an undated photo. Credit: Reuters file photo

According to Chinese government records, 100 tons of caterpillar fungus is produced alone in Qinghai province, selling for 180 million to 200 million yuan. 

In past years, herders found an abundance of caterpillar fungus in the hills during springtime in prime production areas so that many of them could collect enough in a month. 

But that’s proving more difficult these days.

Another Tibetan in Kardze’s Lithang town said about 70% of the people in his village used to harvest caterpillar fungus a few years ago. But now, only about half do so because of intensive harvesting. 

The high demand has also boosted production of fake caterpillar fungus in Chinese markets, according to a Tibetan businessman who lives in Lhasa, capital of the Tibet Autonomous Region.

Translated by Tenzin Dickyi for RFA Tibetan. Edited by Roseanne Gerin and Malcolm Foster.

High school pitcher throws no-hitter

Duksoo High School right-hander Kim Tae-hyung threw a no-hitter Saturday.

The second-year pitcher didn’t allow a hit and struck out 15 batters over nine innings in his school’s 4-0 victory over Cheongwon High School in their National High School Weekend League game at Gueui Stadium in Seoul.

According to the Korea Baseball Softball Association (KBSA), Kim walked two batters and threw 117 pitches.

In order to prevent injuries among young and still-growing athletes, the KBSA has a 105-pitch per day limit on high school pitchers. But an exception is granted when a pitcher is working on a no-hitter or a perfect game, and that pitcher must be removed immediately once that bid is broken.

“I was nervous and excited at the same time when I found out I was going to start this game. I just wanted to give the team five strong innings, and I trusted my teammates,” Kim said. “I was able to stay focused thanks to encouraging words from my teammates and coaches.”

For the season, Kim improved to 4-0. He has a 0.58 ERA across 30 2/3 innings, with 38 strikeouts against 14 walks.

The KBSA said it will present Kim with a special achievement award at the end of the second half of the season.

Source: Yonhap News Agency

Half-Korean forward named to S. Korean training camp roster ahead of Women’s World Cup

Half-Korean forward Casey Phair was named to South Korea’s last training camp roster ahead of the FIFA Women’s World Cup on Saturday, becoming the first person of mixed heritage to join a senior Korean women’s national football team.

The Korea Football Association (KFA) announced a 31-player camp squad featuring the 15-year-old Phair and two other teenagers: Hyundai High School teammates Won Ju-eun and Kwon Da-eun. At 15 years and 309 days old, Kwon is the second-youngest player ever to make a senior national football team, men’s or women’s.

Born to an American father and a Korean mother in the United States, Phair had a star turn for South Korea in April in the qualifiers for the 2024 Asian Football Confederation U-17 Women’s Asian Cup. She grabbed a brace in South Korea’s 16-0 rout of Tajikistan, and then scored a hat trick to help South Korea beat Hong Kong 12-0.

Phair is training with the Players Development Academy in New Jersey. The KFA noted Phair’s aggressive play and nose for the goal.

The teenagers are joined by usual suspects such as midfielders Ji So-yun and Cho So-hyun, forwards Choe Yu-ri and Jung Seol-bin, and goalkeepers Yoon Young-geul and Kim Jung-mi.

The 31 players will report to training camp at the National Football Center in Paju, some 40 kilometers northwest of Seoul, between June 18 and 23.

Coached by Colin Bell, South Korea will host Haiti in their final tuneup match on July 8, after which Bell will whittle down the roster to the final 23 players.

This year’s Women’s World Cup, co-hosted by Australia and New Zealand, kicks off on July 20. South Korea will open their Group H play on July 25 against Colombia in Sydney. They will then take on Morocco in Adelaide on July 30 and Germany in Brisbane on Aug. 3.

The top two nations from each of the eight groups will advance to the round of 16. This will be South Korea’s fourth appearance at the Women’s World Cup. They’ve been in the knockout stage just once: in 2015 in Canada, where they lost to France 3-0 in the round of 16.

Source: Yonhap News Agency

BTS’ new single ‘Take Two’ tops iTunes charts in 92 countries

K-pop supergroup BTS’ 10th anniversary song “Take Two” has debuted atop iTunes Top Songs charts in 92 countries around the world, the band’s agency said Saturday.

The countries include the United States, Britain, France and Germany, according to BigHit Music.

Released Friday, the song expresses the band’s gratitude and commitment to its dedicated fans, who have been with it every step of the way.

It was co-composed by Suga, with RM and J-Hope, two of his bandmates, contributing to the composition and lyrics writing of the song.

Source: Yonhap News Agency

‘The Roundup: No Way Out’ becomes 1st 2023 film to top 7 mln admissions

The Korean action comedy film “The Roundup: No Way Out,” starring Ma Dong-seok, has become the first film of 2023 to cross the 7 million mark in audience number at the local box office, the film’s distributor said Saturday.

The sequel to “The Roundup” (2022) reached the milestone at 12:10 p.m. on the 11th day of its release, according to ABO Entertainment.

The previous Korean film that collected more than 7 million moviegoers in the country was “Hansan: Rising Dragon,” which was released in July and passed the milestone about a month later.

The new movie’s tickets were selling faster than its predecessor “The Roundup,” which took three more days to hit the same milestone.

If this pace continues, industry watchers expect “No Way Out” could exceed the box office record of “The Roundup,” which topped the annual domestic box office last year with 12.69 million admissions.

“The Roundup: No Way Out” is the third installment of a crime action franchise that began with “The Outlaws” (2017), which attracted 6.87 million viewers.

In the new film, rough-and-tough cop Ma Seok-do (played by Ma) chases down a local drug ring as a new and dangerous drug is circulating around local clubs.

Source: Yonhap News Agency