Police in China beat and detained political activists marking the 23rd anniversary of the brutal crackdown on the Tiananmen Square democracy protests Sunday, rights campaigners said. Officers used violence against activists in the southeast province of Fujian and detained them, while more than 30 people who came to Beijing “to petition” were held and forced to return to their home province, the activists reported. “Around 20 rights defenders were stopped by police and beaten this morning on May First Square,” Shi Liping, the wife of activist Lin Bingxing, told AFP by phone from Fuzhou, capital of Fujian province. “The police said they were going to ‘beat them to death.’ They took about eight people into custody, including my husband. I fear he has been beaten badly.” Police in Fuzhou contacted by AFP denied anyone had been detained. The U.S. urged China to free all those still held 23 years after the 1989 Tiananmen Square demonstrations and to stop harassing protesters and their relatives. State Department deputy spokesman Mark Toner said Sunday the United States remembered the “violent suppression” of Tiananmen and called on China to do more to protect the universal human rights of its citizens. “We encourage the Chinese government to release all those still serving sentences for their participation in the demonstrations; to provide a full public accounting of those killed, detained or missing; and to end the continued harassment of demonstration participants and their families,” Toner’s statement said. The statement made no specific mention of accounts from rights campaigners that Chinese police beat and detained political activists Sunday. People’s Liberation Army soldiers stormed into central Beijing on June 3-4, 1989, firing upon unarmed protesters and citizens, killing hundreds if not thousands, as they ended six weeks of protests on Tiananmen Square. More than two decades later, Beijing still considers the incident a “counter-revolutionary rebellion” and a “political storm” and has refused to acknowledge any wrongdoing or consider compensation for those killed. In Beijing, police detained Saturday at least 30 activists from eastern Zhejiang province at a railway station and put them on a bus back to their hometown of Wuxi. “The police told us it was because of June 4 [the day of the crackdown], that during sensitive periods they had to clean up unstable elements,” petitioner Xie Qiming told AFP from the bus. “No one was beaten, but there were no legal procedures either, they just forced us onto the bus and are sending us home.” Any mention of the 1989 protests is banned in state media. But the overseas dissident website www.molihua.org in recent days urged those opposed to the crackdown to dress in black and “stroll” in public places throughout China on June 3-4. The call, which spread through numerous microblogs, was similar to ones last year urging Chinese to hold protests akin to those that spread through the Arab world. In recent days, thousands of people have “strolled” down the main street of Wansheng district in the southwestern city of Chongqing in protest against the local government while businesses have been on strike, locals and microblog postings said. When contacted by AFP, Wansheng police refused to confirm the veracity of photos posted on microblogs showing more than 10,000 people marching Friday night. Veteran dissident Hu Jia said on his microblog that police had stepped up security around the homes of numerous political activists and social critics in Beijing. Rights activists and lawyers said police had also contacted them and warned against participating in activities marking the crackdown. Numerous members of the underground Shouwang Protestant Church were also detained by police and prevented from attending a Sunday outdoor service in Beijing due to the sensitive date, members said on a church blog. “It’s been more than three decades since the beginning of the ‘reform and opening’ era in China, yet the government has displayed little interest in reforming or opening when it comes to the protests and bloodshed from 1989,” said Sophie Richardson, China director at Human Rights Watch.
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