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Outside China he is known simply as Tank Man. Inside the country he is not  known at all. No trace is to be found of the young man armed only with  shopping bags who 20 years ago blocked a column of tanks rolling through  Beijing. His defiance became the defining image of the student  demonstrations crushed by the People’s Liberation Army.

  It was on the morning of June 5 that he appeared from nowhere. A line of 18  tanks began to pull out of Tiananmen Square and drove east along the Avenue  of Eternal Peace.




  A day earlier, the square had been cleared of students. The provocative  plaster Goddess of Democracy statue had tumbled under the tracks of a tank.  After seven weeks, the Communist Party was again in control of the plaza  that symbolises the heart of its power. The broad road was empty of humanity  before the fearsome display of force.

  Suddenly a slight figure in a white shirt and black trousers, a shopping bag  in each hand, dashed out into the road and stood waiting as the tanks  approached. The lead vehicle halted. It was a breathtaking standoff. The  lone man stood firm. Would the tank run him down?




 It moved right to go around him. The man waved the shopping bag in his right  hand then danced a few steps to the left to block the tank again. The tank  swerved back left to avoid him. The man waved the bag again and stepped to  the right. Both halted. The tank even turned off its engine.




  Then the man switched his bags into one hand and jumped on to the machine. He  banged his fist on the metal monster and appeared to talk to the soldiers  inside. After a few moments he clambered back to the ground and resumed his  blocking position. The tank driver even opened the hatch, perhaps to talk.




  Then a man on a bicycle darted out from the roadside. Two others followed on  foot, hands in the air, rushing to hustle the unknown man out of harm’s way.  He was never seen again.




  The tanks trundled forward, mashing the asphalt under their tracks as they  left the city. It has become an image for ever identified with the defiance  displayed that spring by students and citizens demanding greater freedoms  and more accountability from their Government.




  The identity of Tank Man remains a mystery. Did he vanish back into the crowd?  Was he picked up by police and jailed? Even executed? Throughout the  deathdefying stand-off, none of the many cameras focused on him from the  Beijing Hotel ever captured his face. Perhaps only the tank driver and  passers-by who pulled him away ever saw his features.

  The only official comment that China made came from the previous President,  Jiang Zemin, in an interview in 1990 with Barbara Walters. Speaking through  an interpreter, he said: “I can’t confirm whether this young man you  mentioned was arrested or not.” Then he added in English: “I think never  killed.”




  Within days of the incident, the Sunday Express named him as Wang  Weilin, 19. That identification is now regarded as almost certainly spurious.




  Even the aggressive media in Hong Kong and Taiwan have failed to track him  down. One anonymous writer, identifying himself only as a Hong Kong  academic, produced a detailed article saying that the man was an  archaeologist who eventually found safety in Taiwan, where he worked for the  National Palace Museum and had chosen to live in secrecy. The museum issued  a clear denial. Other media found no trace of him on the island.




  There have been detailed discussions about whether the men who helped him away  were secret police or anxious bystanders, with debate based on complicated  analysis of their clothes and demeanour.




  The American broadcaster PBS devoted a 50-minute documentary to Tank Man in  2006. If it reached any conclusion, it was that he simply disappeared back  into the anonymity of his daily life. The Hong Kong-based Information Centre  for Human Rights in China cited an internal party document as saying that  the authorities were never able to find him. The document suggested that the  name provided by the Sunday Express was false. Mr Jiang was quoted as  saying: “We can’t find him. We got his name from journalists. We have  checked through computers but can’t find him among the dead or among those  in prison.”




  Han Dongfang, the leader of a workers’ union during the tumult, said: “I don’t  think anyone in the world can find this person . . . Who he was is not  important at all. What is important is that he was there, and by his act he  gave encouragement to a lot of people.”




  Perhaps family and friends know who he is. Perhaps, one day, he will choose to  step forward and make himself known to the world. He may, even now, be  unaware of the mystique that surrounds his act.




  Photographs of the face-off are banned in China and blocked on the internet by  the Great Firewall of China. Few Chinese have ever seen the image that for  the rest of the world symbolises the student movement of that spring in 1989.




  If he were to come forward, he would end one of the great unsolved mysteries  of the 20th century. But doing so might diminish the power of his courageous  act: an Everyman who chose to show indomitable spirit in the face of the  tyranny of dictatorship.




  The deadly struggle

 

  — The 1989 Tiananmen Square protests began in April after the death of the  liberal reformer Hu Yaobang, below right. On April 22, 50,000 protesters  gathered in the square where Mao Zedong first proclaimed the People’s  Republic of China, to commemorate Hu, a former general secretary of the  Communist Party, who had urged democratic reform




  — The number of people attending rose steadily and the demonstration turned  from a commemoration into a broader protest against the Government. By the  end of April more than a million people had gathered in the square at the  centre of Beijing. The protests were embarrassing the Government and frantic  changes were made to the schedule of a visit by the Soviet leader, Mikhail  Gorbachev, below left. International attention focused on the protest as  students began hunger strikes in the square 

 


— Zhao Ziyang, Hu’s moderate successor as general secretary, publicly declared  his sympathy for the protesters and asked for their forgiveness. He was  subsequently removed from his post by party hardliners and remained under  house arrest for the remainder of his life 

 


— On June 4, after seven weeks of protest, the tanks of the People’s  Liberation Army entered Tiananmen Square. In two ****** days they dispersed  the remaining demonstrators and killed hundreds of unarmed people in nearby  streets. The number is disputed but the government figure of 241 is widely  believed to be too low. Thousands more dissidents were detained. The  massacre drew international condemnation but halted momentum for democratic  reform.


 

  Source: Times database


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