FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
June 3,
2013
Contact: Rohit
Mahajan 202 530 4976 mahajanr@rfa.org
Radio Free Asia
Releases Interactive e-Book on 1989 Tiananmen Crackdown
WASHINGTON, DC – On the
eve of the 24th anniversary of the June 4, 1989, crackdown on pro-democracy
demonstrators in Beijing, Radio Free Asia released an interactive e-book in
Mandarin Chinese, titled Tiananmen Incident in Historical Perspective. Consisting
of multimedia content and eyewitness accounts, the digital-format publication
recounts the demonstrations and the eventual dead-of-night crackdown near
Tiananmen Square that left an unknown number of people dead in China’s capital.
“Almost a quarter
century later in China, government censors have all but blotted out the memory
of Tiananmen in the mainland,” RFA
President Libby Liu said. “For those fortunate enough to have access to
uncensored information, that’s as tragic as it is unimaginable.
“With this e-book, we
hope to restore for our Chinese audience the real-life stories and accurate
information that is simply missing from China’s official version of what
happened in Beijing on June 4, 1989.”
The e-book comprises rare
video footage, audio recordings, photographs, and a timeline of events, as well
as a detailed account by RFA Executive Editor Dan Southerland, then the Beijing
bureau chief for The Washington Post, who covered the events on the
ground with a team of reporters. Also included are interviews with surviving
student leaders, who discuss the demonstrations that began in mid-April and
grew to about a million people in May. The lives of these leaders since the
1989 crackdown, as well as some of its central figures, are the subject of the
publication’s section “Where Are They Now?”
The e-book may be accessed
and downloaded from RFA’s website for iPads and tablets, and will be made
available on Apple iTunes in the near future.
# # #
Radio
Free Asia is a private, nonprofit corporation broadcasting and publishing
online news, information, and commentary in nine East Asian languages to
listeners who do not have access to full and free news media. RFA’s
broadcasts seek to promote the rights of freedom of opinion and expression,
including the freedom to “seek, receive, and impart information and ideas
through any media and regardless of frontiers.” RFA is funded by an annual
grant from the Broadcasting Board of Governors.
Rohit Mahajan | Radio Free Asia |
Media Relations Manager
mahajanr@rfa.org | O:
202.530.4976 | M: 202.489.8021