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CRF 2004, No.2 - Tiananmen: The Once and Future China
Letter From the Editor
News Update
![[CRF No.2, 2004 cover]](http://www.hrichina.org/public/resources/CRF-covers/CRF-2004-2_cover.gif)
History: Setting the Record Straight
Memory: Honoring the Debt
Fang Lizhi recounts the events leading up to the tragedy at Tiananmen Square.
Dr. Jiang Yanyong's letter to China's top leadership, recording his experiences of the massacre and calling for a reassessment of the 1989 Democracy Movement; and A poem by Wang Yu
Wang Debang recalls the events of June 4th and offers his assessment of why the student movement was doomed to fail.
Andrea Worden observed elation and despair in Hunan's capital city during the spring of 1989; and A poem by an unknown author
Liu Binyan places the failure of the 1989 Democracy Movement and China's current malaise at the feet of the country's top intellectuals.
Vision: Moving Forward
Liu Binyan places the failure of the 1989 Democracy Movement and China's current malaise at the feet of the country's top intellectuals.
Liu Xiaobo observes how the detention of three Tiananmen Mothers highlights the righteousness of their cause.
Perry Link puts the Tiananmen Mothers forward as an antidote to the crippling cynicism of Chinese society.
Pu Zhiqiang offers tribute to less widely acknowledged heroes and victims of the violent crackdown.
Wu Guoguang calls for human rights intervention on behalf of the Party Secretary who was purged for defending the protestors; and A Poem by Qin Xiaozhou
An update on the situations of the 21 student leaders most sought by the Chinese authorities in 1989.
Regular Features
Wang Juntao calls for a new approach in addressing the deterioration of China's human rights situation since Tiananmen.
Hu Ping suggests that the Chinese government's intransigence regarding June 4th could constitute a threat to world peace.
Ren Bumei feels that China and the Chinese people cannot recover from June 4th until each individual examines his personal responsibility; and Seventy Years Already, and Dreams Follow No Party Line
Wang Yu interviews participants of the 1989 Democracy Movement.
After Tiananmen: Global Media and the Spring of 1989
Gina Marchetti describes how Tiananmen has made its presence felt in global cinema over the past 15 years.
Toronto Exhibition Commemorates Tiananmen
Artists from around the world exhibited paintings and photographs at an exhibition in Toronto commemorating the 15th anniversary of June 4th.
A list of Internet resources relating to the 1989 Democracy Movement.
A list of people still in prison or executed for crimes related to the 1989 Democracy Movement.
The continued political persecution of Zhang Ming, a veteran of Tiananmen.
What you can do about the issues discussed.
HRIC's activities March through May 2004.
Feedback from our readers.
HRIC and the International Federation for Human Rights present a preliminary assessment of the
EU/China Human Rights Dialogue.
