While I was in Qingdao, this was happening about a 45 minute walk from my dorm:
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Professor beaten for honoring ousted China leader
By AUDRA ANG – 1 hour ago
BEIJING (AP) — A 75-year-old retired Chinese professor said Tuesday that he was beaten up for commemorating the death of a reformist communist leader ousted for sympathizing with the 1989 Tiananmen Square protesters.
Sun Wenguang said a group of five men attacked him Saturday while he was trying to pay his respects to Zhao Ziyang, the former premier and general secretary of the ruling Communist Party.
The weekend marked "Qingming" — grave sweeping day — an annual festival where Chinese honor the dead.
Sun said he was followed by a police car on Saturday when he went to visit a memorial honoring Chinese martyrs on Heroes' Mountain in Jinan, the capital of Shandong province. He said he carried five small banners, one of which said "mourning for the martyr Zhao Ziyang."
He said he was attacked when he entered the memorial grounds. He said he was then beaten and "kicked like a football" for more than 10 minutes.
"They were very strong. They did not say a word," Sun said in a telephone interview from a Jinan hospital. "They broke three of my ribs. ... I was just lying there. I couldn't move."
It was not immediately clear who the men were. Plainclothes security agents or thugs hired by local authorities often intimidate activists or residents who are involved in sensitive issues.
Telephone calls to the public security bureau and state security department in Jinan were not immediately answered.
Sun, a retired professor from Shandong University, said he has been repeatedly warned against honoring Zhao, who died in 2005. Zhao was forced to step down for sympathizing with pro-democracy protesters in 1989 and spent his last 15 years of his life under house arrest.
Sun said he had visited the memorial before with no repercussions. Last year, Sun said he did not make it because public security officials threatened Sun's wife about the "consequences" if he commemorated Zhao's death during Qingming.
He said he was beaten up Saturday possibly because this year marks the 20th anniversary of the military's crackdown on the Tiananmen demonstrators.
"I never expected them to beat me in broad daylight," Sun said in a weak voice, adding that he could not move his body.
According to human rights groups, Sun, a former physics professor who later taught management before he retired, was detained and imprisoned many times in the 1960s through the 1980s for expressing dissenting views such as criticizing Mao Zedong, founder of Communist China.
Sun said he also had recent run-ins with authorities because he gave speeches and posted articles about Zhao.
Qingming is traditionally a politically sensitive festival.
In 1976, thousands of people streamed to Tiananmen on Qingming to lay wreathes and flowers honoring Zhou Enlai, the beloved premier who had died in January.
The violent suppression of that spontaneous movement set the stage for the arrests of the ultra-leftist "Gang of Four," headed by Mao Zedong's wife, Jiang Qing, and the end of the Cultural Revolution later that year.
Copyright © 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
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Another story from the NY Times with more details:
(http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/08/world/asia/08china.html?ref=global-home)
April 8, 2009
China Rights Activist Beaten at Cemetery
By SHARON LAFRANIERE
BEIJING —For the past four years on a traditional Chinese holiday to honor the dead, Sun Wenguang, a retired university professor, has gone to the cemetery to remember a Communist party leader who sympathized with Tiananmen Square protesters.
The worst that ever happened was police questioned him, he said.
Last Saturday was different. Mr. Sun, 75, a former physics professor and longtime activist, said four or five men attacked him in the cemetery and beat him severely. He is now in the hospital with three broken ribs and injuries to his spine, head, back, arms and legs, according to China Human Rights Defenders, a human rights group.
The group said the attack on Mr. Sun is part of a concerted effort by the Chinese government to head off any efforts to commemorate the victims of the Tiananmen Square massacre. June 4 is the 20th anniversary of the government’s crackdown that led to the deaths of hundreds of pro-democracy demonstrators.
“Chinese authorities are staging a campaign of terror to intimidate and suppress expressions of commemoration for the 1989 Tiananmen massacre,” the group said in a statement.
Security officials in Jinan, a city about 300 miles south of Beijing where the incident occurred, referred media calls to the propaganda office of the city’s communist party. No one answered the phone at the office.
Saturday was Qingming, or tomb-sweeping day, an annual Chinese holiday to remember the dead. Mr. Sun said he announced in an internet posting that he would visit a cemetery to honor the death of former Communist Party general secretary Zhao Ziyang, who was purged from the party and was placed under house arrest for 16 years after expressing sympathy for Tiananmen Square protestors.
“It is important for China to restore the memory of its history,” Mr. Sun said in a telephone interview from a hospital in Jinan, a city about 300 miles south of Beijing. “Zhou Ziyang is such an important person in Chinese history and students today have no idea who he is. That is outrageous.”
As he left the teacher’s dormitory at Shandong University Saturday morning, a public security officer and about 20 plainclothes officers tried to stop him. ”They said, ‘Don’t go there today. So many people are going there. It is dangerous’,” he said.
When he got in a taxi, a car followed him, he said. He had started down a cemetery path, carrying a banner that read: “Condolences to the heroes who died for freedom.” Then four or five men jumped him from behind, lifted him off the ground and threw him into a deep ditch, he said. Other people came to the edge of the ditch, he said, “but nobody tried to help.”
He said the men kicked and beat him for more than 10 minutes before a uniformed police officer showed up and summoned an ambulance. In the four days he has been in the hospital, police have not shown up to investigate the incident, he said.
“I still feel very weak. And I think probably my days are numbered. But I don’t feel regret. I am 75 years old and I would be very happy to sacrifice my life for my ideals,” he said.
Mr. Sun has a long history of pro-democracy activism. He was jailed for seven years in the 1970s and was one of the first people to sign Charter 08, which calls for democratic reforms.
Still, he said, “I didn’t expect this. I was not trying to organize any group of people. It was just a personal visit to a cemetery. In order to fight for democracy, we need to make personal efforts.”
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This is certainly not a rare event here, but I've been to this cemetery so it makes it very real and very disturbing. Of course, few people here are even aware of this happening. I stumbled upon this story less than an hour after it broke on AP. I copied it immediately, because I figured it would be blocked. I'm sure any Chinese site with the story was blocked much sooner. I was able to find one mention of this on a mainland Chinese site in Chinese, and it was a blog that depicted the event as an act of random violence as opposed to political violence. I think this kind of suppression is sponsored on a local level in an effort to keep dissidents down and prevent them from embarrassing (and thus damaging the careers) of the provincial officials. Very very strange.