IGCSE History


sidebar

Sidebar content in here.

China in the 1990s

The CCP blamed the demonstration on foreign influence. ‘English Corners’ in Chinese cities were closed. These were areas where people gathered to talk about the West. University campuses were put off limits for western journalists. Chinese students studying abroad were temporarily prevented from returning home. In Beijing University all first year students from 1989-93 had to spend their first year doing military training.

But the reaction was not as severe as it might have been. The death penalty was only applied to protestors charged with serious violence, for example attacks on soldiers. The leaders were not executed. At East China Normal University in Shanghai, activists, on graduation, were allocated jobs as secondary school teachers as punishment. This seems a remarkably light form of punishment. Zheu Rongji, the Mayor of Shanghai, who refused to use force against the demonstrators, was promoted to the post of Vice-Premier in 1991.

 

Despite the crack down on the students, the modernisation of China continued. Deng’s great aim was to reunite Hong Kong with China when the British lease ran out in 1997. He did not live to see this happen. He died in 1992. However, agreement was reached between China and Britain that the status of Hong Kong would remain unchanged for fifty years when the hand over took place. In many ways Hong Kong was the model that Deng had tried to follow in China and he and his successors had no wish to lose what was an important link with capitalism and the West.

news

image 2

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit, sed diam nonummy nibh euismod tincidunt ut PVII excelsior magna aliquam erat very cool. Ut wisi enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exerci tation Murray suscipit lobortis nisl ut aliquip ex ea commodo sound asleep.