The Tienanmen Square Protests were a series of demonstrations led by labor activists, intellectuals, and students between April 15 and June 4, 1989. They had their beginning in the funeral for former Secretary General of the CPC, Hu Yaobang. Yaobang was in favor of rapid reform, and had openly derided what he termed as Maoist excesses. As such, he was positioned as a scapegoat for the pro-democracy protests of 1986-1987 and then forced out of the party. Before his funeral, tens of thousands of students staged sit ins across
The protests escalated across the country to include demands for free media reform and open dialogue between party leaders and elected representatives of the students. As the protests continued to escalate, party leaders were divided in how best to respond. Then General Secretary Zhao Ziyang advocated a soft approach, while Li Peng was in strongly in favor of a crackdown.
Martial law was declared on May 20, with the actual assault on
The Square was cleared by 5:40 a.m. It is unknown how many were ultimately killed, but estimates range wildly from 200 to 10,000. Protests continued around the country for a few more days before the Chinese government was able to fully regain control. Afterward, there was a purge through out the CPC, as members viewed as sympathetic to the protestors. This included Zhao Ziyang, who was removed from his position as General Secretary and would ultimately die in prison.
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Are you publishing a history book that I don't know about?
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