China confirms death of ex-govt spokesman who denied Tiananmen deaths

AFP  |  Beijing 

on Tuesday announced the death of Yuan Mu, the former government who denied anyone was killed on Square during the bloody 1989 crackdown, nearly two weeks after his passing.

He died aged 91 on December 13 from an illness, state agency said Tuesday.

Some leaders offered tributes to Yuan and condolences to his family, it added.

Reports of Yuan's death had been unusually muted in China's media. The Paper, a state-linked newspaper, last week put up an article with a memorial service notice but quickly removed it.

Yuan's name has also been censored on the Twitter-like Weibo, where a search showed results could not be displayed "according to the relevant laws, regulations and policies".

But a query on an turned up an entry for Yuan where visitors can pay to burn virtual incense or leave virtual flowers.

Born in in 1927, Yuan was a with before joining the government and rising to become a of the Research Office, according to the agency. He also served as of the State Council, China's cabinet.

On June 4, 1989, after student protesters had staged a peaceful seven week sit-in to demand democratic reforms, the sent in tanks and soldiers to quell the protest.

Yuan had then said no one was killed at Square but later admitted 300 soldiers and citizens died around it, with some 7,000 injured, a number far lower than many independent estimates.

The government has since refused to talk about the number of people who may have been killed, and mentions of the incident are censored on the Chinese internet.

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

First Published: Wed, December 26 2018. 19:10 IST