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China is marking the 20th anniversary of the crushing of the Beijing democracy protests with tight security in Tiananmen Square, increased monitoring of dissidents and blocks imposed on social networking websites and online message boards.
On Thursday morning, exactly 20 years after tanks and troops moved in against the student-led protests, hundreds of extra police and plainclothes security personnel were deployed in the central Beijing square, the symbolic heart of political power in China.
Foreign journalists, including Al Jazeera's crew, were barred from the area and other visitors were subject to rigorous searches, although the square remained open officially.
The lock down comes as the authorities try to prevent any event and stifle open discussion marking Thursday's anniversary, fearing that any commemoration could threaten their hold on power.
While thousands are expected to attend rallies around the world marking the military crackdown on June 4, 1989, Chinese state media has made no mention of the event.
The authorities are also reported to have blocked access to dozens of websites, including Twitter, Hotmail and photo-sharing site Flickr, in a wide-ranging effort to muzzle online activism related to the anniversary.
Online message boards have also been blocked, as have access to video-sharing sites such as YouTube and China-based VeryCD.
The only major commemoration expected on Chinese soil was to take place in semi-autonomous Hong Kong, which has a separate legal system to the rest of China.
There thousands of protesters are expected to join a candle-lit vigil on Thursday evening marking the anniversary of the crackdown in which hundreds or possibly thousands of protesters were killed.
'Learn and heal'
Ahead of Thursday's anniversary, Hillary Clinton, the US secretary of state, urged China's leaders to open up about what she called "the darker events" of the country's past.
She called on China to publish a full list of those killed or missing as a result of the crackdown, saying it would help China "learn and heal".
The government's only official acknowledgement of casualties says that 241 people died as troops moved to evict protesters from Tiananmen Square and surrounding areas.
Activists and human rights groups, however, say that thousands may have died.
The official government line is that the protests were a "counter-revolutionary" conspiracy and that the military crackdown was necessary to preserve stability and continue economic reforms.
"History has shown that the party and government have put China on the proper socialist path that serves the fundamental interests of the Chinese people," Qin Gang, a spokesman for the Chinese foreign ministry, told reporters on Tuesday.
Harassed
China has certainly changed dramatically in the 20 years since the crackdown, with millions lifted out of poverty and the country's economy now the third largest in the world.
But while the country has changed economically, politically the ruling Communist party shows no sign of loosening its grip.
Rights groups say that dozens of dissidents have been detained and harassed ahead of the anniversary, while a group representing mothers of some of the dead from 1989 say they have been prevented from leaving their homes to commemorate their children.
"The leaders would rather just avoid this topic," Zhang Boshu, a Beijing philosopher who has urged a public reckoning with the killings, told the Associated Press.
"They know that the 1989 crackdown, shooting their own citizens, was a terrible blow to their legitimacy," he said.
In the days ahead of the anniversary a group known as the Tiananmen Mothers released an open letter calling on China's leaders to fully account for the events of 20 years ago.
"The basic facts of what happened at that time have not changed," said the group which represents families of those killed in the crackdown or are still missing.
"The nature of this tragedy has not changed either. It remains a bloody massacre of peaceful civilians."
Al Jazeera English - Asia-Pacific - Lockdown for Tiananmen anniversary
On Thursday morning, exactly 20 years after tanks and troops moved in against the student-led protests, hundreds of extra police and plainclothes security personnel were deployed in the central Beijing square, the symbolic heart of political power in China.
Foreign journalists, including Al Jazeera's crew, were barred from the area and other visitors were subject to rigorous searches, although the square remained open officially.
The lock down comes as the authorities try to prevent any event and stifle open discussion marking Thursday's anniversary, fearing that any commemoration could threaten their hold on power.
While thousands are expected to attend rallies around the world marking the military crackdown on June 4, 1989, Chinese state media has made no mention of the event.
The authorities are also reported to have blocked access to dozens of websites, including Twitter, Hotmail and photo-sharing site Flickr, in a wide-ranging effort to muzzle online activism related to the anniversary.
Online message boards have also been blocked, as have access to video-sharing sites such as YouTube and China-based VeryCD.
The only major commemoration expected on Chinese soil was to take place in semi-autonomous Hong Kong, which has a separate legal system to the rest of China.
There thousands of protesters are expected to join a candle-lit vigil on Thursday evening marking the anniversary of the crackdown in which hundreds or possibly thousands of protesters were killed.
'Learn and heal'
Ahead of Thursday's anniversary, Hillary Clinton, the US secretary of state, urged China's leaders to open up about what she called "the darker events" of the country's past.
She called on China to publish a full list of those killed or missing as a result of the crackdown, saying it would help China "learn and heal".
The government's only official acknowledgement of casualties says that 241 people died as troops moved to evict protesters from Tiananmen Square and surrounding areas.
Activists and human rights groups, however, say that thousands may have died.
The official government line is that the protests were a "counter-revolutionary" conspiracy and that the military crackdown was necessary to preserve stability and continue economic reforms.
"History has shown that the party and government have put China on the proper socialist path that serves the fundamental interests of the Chinese people," Qin Gang, a spokesman for the Chinese foreign ministry, told reporters on Tuesday.
Harassed
China has certainly changed dramatically in the 20 years since the crackdown, with millions lifted out of poverty and the country's economy now the third largest in the world.
But while the country has changed economically, politically the ruling Communist party shows no sign of loosening its grip.
Rights groups say that dozens of dissidents have been detained and harassed ahead of the anniversary, while a group representing mothers of some of the dead from 1989 say they have been prevented from leaving their homes to commemorate their children.
"The leaders would rather just avoid this topic," Zhang Boshu, a Beijing philosopher who has urged a public reckoning with the killings, told the Associated Press.
"They know that the 1989 crackdown, shooting their own citizens, was a terrible blow to their legitimacy," he said.
In the days ahead of the anniversary a group known as the Tiananmen Mothers released an open letter calling on China's leaders to fully account for the events of 20 years ago.
"The basic facts of what happened at that time have not changed," said the group which represents families of those killed in the crackdown or are still missing.
"The nature of this tragedy has not changed either. It remains a bloody massacre of peaceful civilians."
Al Jazeera English - Asia-Pacific - Lockdown for Tiananmen anniversary