[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 84 (Thursday, June 13, 2013)]
[House]
[Page H3360]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
COMMEMORATING THE 24TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE TIANANMEN SQUARE CRACKDOWN
AND BEIJING MASSACRE
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
Ohio (Ms. Kaptur) for 5 minutes.
Ms. KAPTUR. Mr. Speaker, I rise today to commemorate the 24th
anniversary of the 1989 Tiananmen Square crackdown and Beijing massacre
in China.
A quarter of a century ago, the world watched with horror as the
atrocities in Tiananmen Square and nearby streets in Beijing unfolded.
During this anniversary period, it is with solidarity that we remember
the victims of that deep tragedy.
The courageous students protesting on those days in April, May, and
June of 1989 sought basic freedoms. Prophetic in their presence, they
called upon their autocratic, Communist government to embrace liberty,
respect human rights, and put an end to deep-seated corruption. Chinese
intellectuals like Wei Jingsheng championed political reform. They
posted essays on the Democracy Wall in Beijing. For that, he was
arrested and imprisoned twice for a total of 18 years. The Democracy
Wall and its postings were shut down.
Today, still autocratic and still Communist, China faces many of the
same challenges, despite promises by its new leadership that reform
would occur. Millions of Chinese people remain denied adequate food,
housing, and health care, and over 1,200 Chinese dissidents and critics
are known to be imprisoned or detained for standing up for freedom of
speech. Deep disparities between the rich and the poor of China exist.
Eight hundred million Chinese, close to a billion people--60 percent of
its people--exist on less than $15 a day, all while the government
seizes land and forces evictions.
Meanwhile, Communist Party leaders have become billionaires, often
through corruption, graft, and theft, with immunity from a lawless
regime. To rise economically in China, you must take an oath to the
Communist Party and then be accepted into that club of politicians who
become vastly wealthy as they climb the party ladder.
The Market-Leninism that drives China has resulted in 83 billionaires
buying seats in their parliament. I can only imagine what that money
power does to drive out the voices of the masses of the people longing
to be free. The average fortune among these wealthiest 83 Communist
Party delegates is $3.35 billion.
Environmental issues are also a major source of concern for the
Chinese people, and they remain unaddressed. The New York Times
recently reported on the findings of the Global Burden of Disease
Study, which states air pollution contributed to 1.2 million premature
deaths in China in 2010.
It is no secret religious organizations are heavily restricted and
monitored in China. The Catholic Church is banned, and phony bishops
are sanctioned by the government in their stead. Often, ethnic and
religious minorities are intimidated or harassed by government
officials.
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Despite extensive documentation of the truth, the Chinese Communist
Party continues to manipulate and censor the facts surrounding the
events at Tiananmen Square and Beijing a quarter century ago; not to
mention their ongoing censorship of the press and the Internet. The
government blocks the social media, denying Facebook and Twitter the
ability to operate. Journalists are regularly harassed and often
imprisoned.
In remembrance of freedom's prophets, lost peacefully pursuing
liberty at Tiananmen Square and in Beijing a quarter century ago, and
those today who dream of a more liberty-loving future in that country,
our Nation honors their noble spirits, their courage, their
aspirations, and their lives given in pursuit of the cause of liberty.
____________________