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Students Push Through Police Lines in Beijing March

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Times Staff Writer

Thousands of defiant pro-democracy student protesters poured out from university campuses, pushed through police lines and marched in several columns toward downtown Tian An Men Square today.

The first column to reach the square--about 2,000 students who came marching from the east side of the city--encountered a line of about 500 “People’s Armed Police” attempting to block their path shortly before noon.

“The people’s police love the people,” chanted the demonstrating students as they pushed their way forward. “Long live democracy!”

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The police yielded to the students, gradually allowing the entire column into the square, but held back a crowd of sympathetic onlookers of equal size.

On the west side of the square, columns originating in the northwest campus district ignored police warnings, merged together and moved toward the square. Reports from various parts of the city indicated that by noon, at least 20,000 students were marching toward the square or had reached it. There were no reports of serious clashes with police.

Students carried banners with pro-democracy slogans and chanted, “Down with corruption!” and “Patriotism is not a crime!” They also shouted criticisms of official news media, which have generally carried only severely censored reports about their protests.

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At least 1,000 police officers were already blocking pedestrian traffic from Tian An Men Square as the student marches began. Protesters have staged several huge demonstrations at or near the square since a wave of pro-democracy protests began nearly three weeks ago.

Unofficial reports indicated that student demonstrations were also being planned for today in other Chinese cities.

International Meeting Nearby

About 2,000 finance officials, bankers and other dignitaries from about 40 countries are attending a meeting of the Asian Development Bank today in the Great Hall of the People, which faces the square. Chinese President Yang Shangkun is scheduled to address the meeting.

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Communist Party General Secretary Zhao Ziyang, speaking Wednesday at a meeting celebrating the 70th anniversary of a 1919 student protest that launched the pro-democracy and pro-science May 4th Movement, added his voice to those trying to calm the protests.

“Zhao Ziyang said today that the desire of Chinese students and others for promoting democracy, combatting corruption and developing education and science coincides with the aims of the Chinese Communist Party,” the official New China News Agency reported Wednesday.

Zhao warned, however, that “China’s magnificent and arduous modernization drive and reform can be smoothly carried out only in a stable social and political environment,” the agency reported.

“When we have stability we sometimes aren’t aware of its value,” Zhao said. “But once we lose it we feel deep regret . . . . Stability, gradualism, sober-mindedness, order and legality are not only required by economic construction and reform, but also by democracy and science.”

Many students, however, believe that in the wake of a refusal by the government to open a formal dialogue with the ad hoc student association that has organized recent demonstrations, another show of strength today is essential.

Among the key demands of students are greater press freedom, improved treatment of intellectuals and a stepped-up attack on corruption. They also want legalization of independent student associations free of government control.

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About 80 Chinese journalists from state-run official media met Wednesday at a Beijing museum to organize their own protests against government controls.

Journalists said they had drafted petitions protesting the recent decision of Communist Party leaders in Shanghai to fire Qin Benli, the reformist editor of the Shanghai-based World Economic Herald, from his post. The petitions, which journalists said would be presented to the Communist Party Propaganda Department and the State Press and Publications Administration, also call for freedom of speech and press.

With a few exceptions where editors have broken rules, the Chinese media have generally been restricted to printing incomplete accounts of the dramatic protests prepared by the New China News Agency.

During a massive pro-democracy march last Thursday by about 50,000 students and a roughly equal number of non-student supporters, protesters chanted rhymes ridiculing the official Chinese media.

“Chinese journalists feel ashamed,” said a reporter at Wednesday’s meeting. “Fifty thousand students took to the streets last week, and millions of ordinary people watched and sympathized. But we have simply not reported this kind of obvious fact.”

Some reporters said they intended to stage their own protest today outside the headquarters of the New China News Agency. Journalists risk dismissal and termination of their careers for such defiance of Communist Party control.

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