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Regmi vows for timely election

Muslim Association Nepal demands probe commission

Nepali Congress president Koirala says NC's principles can solve problem of the nation

Police close to finding murderer of Haque

Student leaders stage relay fast in Birgunj

Government appoints Shakya as vice chairman of NPC

Nepali in hot pursuit of Japanese to be oldest atop Everest

Solar plane aims for new world distance record

Porn star's calligraphy sparks art debate in China

NC, UML for implementing 25-point directive

Yugkavi Siddhicharan remembered


China rounds up activists on Tiananmen anniversary

4th Jun :

AGENCE FRANCE PRESSE


BEIJING, June 4: Chinese authorities have rounded up hundreds of activists in the capital Beijing, rights campaigners and petitioners said Monday, as they marked the 23rd anniversary of the Tiananmen Square crackdown.


The detentions came as Washington angered Beijing by calling for all those still jailed over the demonstrations on June 4, 1989 -- when hundreds, if not thousands, of protesters were shot and killed by soldiers -- to be freed.


The anniversary of the brutal army action in the heart of Beijing is always hugely sensitive, but particularly so this year ahead of a once-a-decade handover of power marred by fierce in-fighting in the ruling Communist Party.


"They brought in a lot of buses and were rounding up petitioners at the Beijing South rail station on Saturday night," Zhou Jinxia, a petitioner from northeast China´s Liaoning province, told AFP.


"There were between 600 to 1,000 petitioners from all over China. We were processed, we had to register and then they started sending people back to their home towns."


Police made it clear that the round up of petitioners -- people who gather at central government offices in Beijing to seek redress for rights violations in their localities -- was to prevent them from protesting on June 4, she said.


On Monday, police maintained a watchful eye over places where petitioners gather in Beijing as well as public places in the capital.


China still considers the June 4 demonstrations a "counter-revolutionary rebellion" and has refused to acknowledge any wrongdoing or consider compensation for those killed, more than two decades later.


The government attempts to block any public discussion or remembrance of the events by hiding away key dissidents in the run-up to June 4 each year, taking them into custody or placing them under house arrest.


Any mention of the 1989 protests is banned in state media, and the subject is largely taboo in China. Searches on China´s popular social media sites for June 4, the number 23 and the word "candle" were blocked on Monday.


Despite the heightened security, numerous public events have been held around the nation to commemorate the "Tiananmen massacre" and demand democratic reforms.


More than 80 rights campaigners met in a Beijing square on Saturday, carrying banners and shouting slogans calling for a reassessment of the 1989 protests.


"We shouted ´down with corruption´, and ´protect our rights´," Wang Yongfeng, a Shanghai activist, who attended the protest, told AFP.


"So many people were killed on June 4, we think the government should fully account for what happened."


Photographs of the Saturday protest posted online showed demonstrators with large placards that said "remember our struggle for democracy, freedom and rights as well as those heroes who met tragedy."


A similar protest occurred in a park in southeast China´s Guiyang city last week, with police subsequently taking into custody at least four of the organisers of the event, the Chinese Human Rights Defenders group said on its website.


The US State Department on Sunday called on Beijing to release those still serving sentences for their participation in th

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