Twenty-three years have passed since the Chinese regime cracked down on student protesters in Tiananmen Square on June 4, 1989. Wang Jue, a scholar who witnessed the first killing of the resulting bloody massacre, still remembered everything vividly.
Chinese leader Hu Jintao has agreed to have public security chief Zhou Yongkang investigated, The Epoch Times has learned from well-placed sources in Beijing.
When Google left mainland China, it was pushed out. The search engine giant was a casualty of the struggle over succession in the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), according to exclusive information provided by a high-ranking government official in Beijing.
Bo Xilai, the recently ousted Communist Party official, kept a lot of secrets. Before Bo Guagua, he had another son: Li Wangzhi—who became a supporter of democracy in China, and is now reportedly under house arrest in the country’s north.
The Beijing source said the top leaders have known Zhou’s crimes for a long time but hesitate in exposing them for fear that revealing their scale would be so shocking to people that it might spell the end of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP).