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- <text id=90TT1424>
- <title>
- June 04, 1990: Three Lives, Then and Now
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- June 04, 1990 Gorbachev:In The Eye Of The Storm
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 60
- Three Lives, Then and Now
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> For thousands of Chinese citizens, the massacre in Tiananmen
- Square marked a personal turning point, irrevocably changing
- their lives and forcing them to make choices they had never had
- to contemplate. That was true for student leaders like Wuer
- Kaixi, who headed Beijing's banned independent union of
- students. It was also true for intellectuals like Zhou Duo, who
- spent more than ten months in jail before being released three
- weeks ago, and for officials like Xu Jiatun, who supported
- conciliation with the protesters and mysteriously turned up in
- California this month for an extended stay in the U.S. Their
- stories:
- </p>
- <p>THE STUDENT
- </p>
- <p> With his handsome face and suave demeanor, Wuer Kaixi was
- the obvious choice as poster boy of the overseas democracy
- movement after he escaped from the mainland nearly a year ago.
- Since then, however, the young dissident has lost some of his
- hero's aura, and his rumored peccadilloes--spending dissident
- funds on a lavish lobster dinner, faking illness during press
- conferences to avoid tough questions, and hyperinflating the
- number of students killed last year--have been well
- chronicled in the press. But he is the wiser for it. "It was
- hard, but that's what press freedom is all about," Wuer, 22,
- said cheerfully last week in Paris, where he lives. "No one gets
- away with anything."
- </p>
- <p> Though Wuer enrolled at Harvard last fall, he dropped out
- in February, in part to focus full time on his role as vice
- president of the Paris-based Federation for Democracy in China.
- He had hoped to join the Goddess of Democracy and take part in
- broadcasting pro-democracy messages into China from nearby
- international waters. But fearing for Wuer's safety, the
- project's organizers balked, and now that the ship has been
- sequestered by anxious authorities in Taiwan, they plan to sell
- it off.
- </p>
- <p> Wuer remains resolutely optimistic about his country's
- future. "Events in Europe and in the Soviet Union have proved
- that when the people are determined, the government must give
- in," he says. But he recognizes that in the short run, the
- outlook is bleak. Recently, Wuer received unconfirmed reports
- that his father, a Communist Party member, had been placed
- under house arrest in Beijing.
- </p>
- <p>THE INTELLECTUAL
- </p>
- <p> When sociologist Zhou Duo heard that the tanks were rumbling
- toward Tiananmen Square, where he had been on a hunger strike
- to show solidarity with the students, his first thought was to
- wave a white flag. But he dismissed the idea as ignoble.
- Instead, Zhou, 43, and popular singer Hou Dejian approached the
- oncoming soldiers and negotiated an agreement that allowed the
- demonstrators to withdraw peacefully.
- </p>
- <p> Three days later, Zhou went into hiding after he learned
- that the innovative Stone Corp., the computer firm he had
- worked for as a policy planner, had become the target of a
- witch-hunt. Its president, Wan Runnan, now a leading dissident
- in exile in Paris, had been close to then party chief Zhao
- Ziyang and an ardent supporter of the students.
- </p>
- <p> Zhou made his way to the coastal city of Yantai, where he
- stayed at a Stone guesthouse for three weeks before police
- caught him. He was detained in a hostel in the Beijing area,
- where, except for a three-day period of solitary confinement,
- he was treated relatively well. Zhou was never formally charged
- or tried. In December he was told he would be released shortly,
- but it was another five months before he, along with 210
- others, gained his freedom.
- </p>
- <p> For Zhou, who is jobless, there are no more thoughts,
- however fleeting, of white flags. Asserting that he will
- continue to speak out against China's leaders, he says, "I plan
- to walk on two legs. One is to find a job. The other, when the
- moment is opportune, is to kick their butts."
- </p>
- <p>THE OFFICIAL
- </p>
- <p> Everyone insists that Xu Jiatun has not defected. Beijing
- says so. Washington says so. And Xu himself says so through
- intermediaries. But it is clear that Xu had more on his mind
- than the inviting sands of Malibu when he and three relatives
- flew from Hong Kong to California four weeks ago. It isn't
- every day, after all, that a member of the Communist Party's
- Central Advisory Commission takes off for the hotbed of
- bourgeois liberalism without permission.
- </p>
- <p> As the head of the Xinhua News Agency in Hong Kong from 1983
- until last February, Xu was Beijing's de facto ambassador to
- the British colony, which is to revert to Chinese rule in 1997.
- Though the 74-year-old Xu's Old Guard credentials are
- impeccable--he was among China's early revolutionaries--he
- advocated free-market reforms and was a close ally of Zhao
- Ziyang's. Last year, when the demonstrations in Beijing sparked
- sympathy protests in Hong Kong, Xu shook hands with some of the
- hunger strikers who gathered outside his office building.
- </p>
- <p> Xu, who is reportedly living in Southern California, has
- said through third parties that he is in the U.S. to vacation
- and conduct "a broad survey of American society." So far, he
- has visited the Grand Canyon and Las Vegas. His friend Lu Keng,
- a Hong Kong journalist, says this "research" will keep Xu in
- America "for quite some time." Says Lu: "My feeling is that he
- won't go back to China until Li Peng is no longer in power. He
- may want to avoid retaliation." Xu's old associates in Beijing
- may be cursing him, but Lu says the former envoy is "happy and
- laughing a lot."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-