Costly date: 64.89 yuan forbidden on Tiananmen June 4 anniversary

AFP  |  Beijing 

China's information blackout about the crackdown on the 1989 Tiananmen protests took a new turn today: users of a popular app could not send each other money transfers alluding to the anniversary date.

Foreign broadcasts on commemoration events are usually blocked while survivors and the families of those killed are put under surveillance or forced to travel out of as the anniversary approaches. Security prevented an from approaching the square today.

is also heavily controlled, and on Monday users of the ubiquitous WeChat application were unable to exchange "red envelopes", or money packets, valued at 89.64 yuan or 64.89 yuan, indicating the date of the anniversary.

A "system busy. Try again later" message appeared every time AFP journalists tried to complete a transaction involving the sum, but the service functioned smoothly if the amount was changed, suggesting deliberate censorship.

People in use clever tactics to circumvent censorship. When dissident Nobel laureate died of while in custody last year, people posted candle emojis as a discreet tribute. Those wanting to allude to the #MeToo movement have used emojis and the Chinese characters for rice and bunny, which are "mi" and "tu".

Chinese did not yield any results for the term "29th anniversary of Tiananmen massacre" during the past week and posts on any commemoration events were missing from China's Twitter-like microblogging platform

The has "spent enormous amounts of resources" to enforce a "thorough and all-encompassing" erasure of information linked to the incident, William Nee, a at Hong Kong, told AFP.

"This year, it might be incrementally more effective, since the government has increased self-censorship on WeChat groups and has become better at using to proactively ban what it deems to be problematic photos." Tencent Holdings, which operates WeChat, could not be reached for comment.

Several prominent bloggers and activists were forced to go on "vacation" under police escort ahead of the sensitive date.

Dissident democracy activist told AFP that two policemen drove him to a hotel in the Yellow Mountains, a popular tourist resort in central China, on May 31, and he will only be allowed to "checkout" on Tuesday afternoon. Activist said two national guards drove him from to a hotel in the centre of Qinhuangdao, a beach resort about 300 kilometres (180 miles) east of the capital on June 1.

"This is already my 14th year of being forced to take a vacation on June 4. But, wherever I am, I fast the whole day and light candles to commemorate the struggle," he said.

"After all, I feel lucky... to be a survivor. On this day 29 years ago, the bullets flew over my head. I also feel saddened... because so many people died, but China is still stuck in 1984 in terms of (political) progress." - US demands death toll -

Families of pro-democracy protesters killed in the 1989 bloodbath have recently written an open letter urging to acknowledge their suffering and "re-evaluate the June Fourth massacre". The semi-autonomous territory of Hong Kong is the only place on Chinese soil where the anniversary is openly marked with a famous annual vigil that took place again today.

US issued a statement urging China to "make a full of those killed, detained or missing" in the massacre. Pompeo quoted as saying: "The ghosts of June 4th have not yet been laid to rest." China lodged a formal diplomatic protest over Pompeo's remarks. "The has already come to a clear conclusion regarding the political disturbances that occurred in the late 1980s," Chinese said.

Pompeo's statement is "groundlessly accusing the and interfering in China's internal affairs. The Chinese side is strongly dissatisfied and resolutely opposes this," Hua added.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, June 04 2018. 20:25 IST