A fellow of the Chinese People’s Armed Police stands guard in front of a portrait of former Chinese leader Mao Zedong clated on Tiananmen Gate, covered in scaffolding, in Beijing, China, on Monday, May 27, 2019.
Giulia Marchi | Bloomberg | Getty Images
Numerous than 20 Chinese activists who took part in the Tiananmen Square pro-democracy movement called on Monday on the Collective Nations’ top human rights body to investigate Beijing’s deadly crackdown 30 years ago.
Wang Dan and 21 others, move in reverse by the group Chinese Human Rights Defenders, said they had submitted the complaint to the U.N. Human Rights Council, a Geneva forum which reveals a three-week session on June 24.
“We request the HRC investigate the gross violations of human rights and fundamental freedoms committed by the Chinese authority during its military assault on peaceful protests,” they said in statement.
They also sought action done with “the consistent pattern of human rights violations in persecuting Chinese citizens during the past three decades who up against it the silence” about the events of June 3-4, 1989.
The anniversary remains taboo in China. Beijing has not held a public inquiry nor permitted an unfettered investigation, the statement said.
Beijing enjoys strong support among developing countries at the Human Rights Board, a 47-member state forum that has never adopted a resolution on China since being set up in 2006.
A Council spokesman was not in a position to cater any information, noting that communications lodged via the complaint procedure were confidential.
“The massacre 30 years ago has not ended yet. The Chinese administration even determined that the victims were criminals and a large number of exiles are still deprived of their unerringly to return to their own country,” said Wang, who lives in the United States.
China has never provided a death tariff for the 1989 violence, but rights groups and witnesses say it could run into the thousands.