本帖最后由 徐文立 于 2020-6-3 09:31 编辑
64大屠殺造成202人死亡名單通過天安門母親組收集(2)(一九八九年至2011年)/徐文立轉載

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(中文內容從英文用翻譯機翻譯,一定不盡準確——徐文立注)
死者仍在增加,非常緩慢,但仍在增加:
203,誠仁興,男,25歲,死於拍攝的;
204,戴金平,男,27歲,死於拍攝的;
205,黎蒿噌,男,20歲,死於拍攝的。
附錄二:在大屠殺造成202人死亡名單
通過天安門母親'組收集(一九八九年至2011年)
由丁子霖和蔣培坤提供
這標誌著第一次在某些情況下天安門受害者,編輯和完整更新列表擴展這裡從原來的,已經出版了英文。
圖片巴紐
101. Li Hui, male, 19, recent graduate from a law school in Beijing
At 11 pm on the 4th, he suddenly heard gunfire. He asked his brother Li Ming to go out with him, and they left their parents' home in the dormitory of the Public Security University in Muxidi to find out what was going on. Soon afterwards, a stray bullet went into his left cheek and out through his ear. His brother was shot in the left leg at the same time. More than an hour later, the family found his body at Fuxing Hospital.
102. Luo Wei, male, 30, assistant engineer at the Beijing Semiconductor Materials Factory
The night of June 4th he was shot while riding a bicycle along the western side of Chang'an Avenue. The Guang'anmen Hospital issued a relatively detailed death certificate: “Gunshot to the abdomen, not immediately fatal, two bullets removed from the abdomen, one was a dumdum bullet that exploded in the abdomen, damaging the liver, kidneys, gall, stomach and digestive tract. An operation was done to treat his liver and stomach but he could not be saved. He died of acute kidney failure.”
103. Qi Wen, male, 16, student at Beijing Railroad Middle School No. Three
He was killed on the night of June 3 by a bullet that struck him as a he passed through Muxidi. His remains were found at the Fuxing Hospital.
104. Liu Zhanmin, male, 38, employee of the China National Metals and Minerals Import and Export Corporation in Beijing.
Between 3 and 4 am on June 4th, he got a call from his wife, who had just given birth. Excited, he rushed from his home at No. 44 East Siliutiao Road to his mother-in-law's home on the southern end of Dong Siliutiao Road. Nothing was heard from him thereafter. Three days later, his family found his body at Peking Union Medical College Hospital labeled “no. 21.” Cause of death was a bullet to the right jaw bone. Those who were involved remember seeing that the hospital had put on display more than 40 photographs of corpses with such serial numbers.
105. Shi Yan, male, 27, musician in the song and dance ensemble of the PLA Air Force Political Work Department
During the pre-dawn hours of June 4th, Shi was shot in the head at an unknown location. A Red Cross ambulance took him to Beijing People's Hospital for emergency treatment. He could not be saved. Later he was cremated at Babaoshan in Beijing.
106. Ren Jianmin, male, 30, peasant from Chenzhuangzi Village, Dingzhou Prefecture in Hebei Province
He was traveling in Inner Mongolia during the student strike, visiting his ethnically Mongolian wife who had just given birth to their child. Just after enjoying his first taste of fatherhood, he was returning to his hometown in Hebei during the pre-dawn hours. Passing through Beijing to change buses, he ran into martial law troops who shot him in the abdomen, causing his intestines to spill out. He was sent to Peking Union Medical College Hospital. The examining physician determined him “dead on arrival” and sent him to the morgue. Then suddenly he “came to life.”
When his family heard the news, they rushed to the hospital, but since they had no money, they could not afford to keep him in the hospital for further treatment. His brother-in-law took him back home to Hebei. During this so-called “period of convalescence at home,” the bullet hole in his abdomen continued to rot. He couldn't stand the endless suffering, and so after the Mid-Autumn Festival that year, he hung himself.
107. Sun Tie, male, 26, employee of the headquarters office of the Bank of China in Beijing and PLA veteran.
On the evening of June 3, Sun came across troops killing people in front of the Military Museum. With a friend, he fled into the Non-ferrous Metal Design Institute nearby, but before they had a chance to catch their breath, the soldiers caught up with them and attacked.
108. XX, male, age and other details not disclosed by the family, high school student at Beijing High School #190
He was the son of the captain of a Beijing police precinct station. During the night of June 3, out of his deep love for his father, he disregarded the “martial law order” and went out to the precinct without authorization to look for his father. His father sternly reproved him and kept him in the station until early the next day. His father thought that “calm had been restored” and ordered one of his policemen to escort his son home. Walking by Nanheyan, he was shot and killed.
109. Su Shengji, male, 43, a journalist who worked at the Residential Construction News in the Asian Games Village, Beijing
At dusk on June 3, Su was discussing work at a friend's house on Songshu Street in Xinjiekou. When night fell, the Emergency Martial Law Notice was announced on television, so Su headed back home. That was the last heard of him. His family searched for him for many years, but they never saw him again either alive or dead.
110. Ren Wenlian, male, 19, freshman in the Mining Department of University of Science and Technology in Beijing.
He was killed in the predawn hours of June 4th, details unknown.
111. Huang Peipu, male, age unknown, home at Huang Zhuang, Sijiqing Gongshe, in Dongran Village in the Haidian District of Beijing
He was killed in the predawn hours of June 4th, details unknown.
112. Zheng Chunfu, male, 37, squad leader of the Old Buildings Construction Brigade at the former imperial palace in Beijing
After 11 pm on June 3, Zheng left his home at 78 Yanyue Lane in the Eastern District of Beijing and was never seen again. For years his family looked for him in the hospitals and crematoria of the Beijing region, but never found him.
113. Name unknown, male, 16, student at the Beijing Construction Industry School
The night of June 3, he was shot at an unknown location. With two bullets in his body, he was sent to the Air Force General Hospital for emergency treatment which proved ineffective.
114. Cao Zhenping, male, 29, employee at the computer center of the Beijing College of Agricultural Machinery Engineering and PLA veteran
During the night of June 3, just as he was bending over to hold up her neck of a female journalist who had been shot, he himself was shot in the back. Immediately after, his lower abdomen was blown apart by the explosion of a dumdum bullet.
115. Li Zhenying, male, 45, technician at the instrumentation factory at the PLA Academy of Military Medical Sciences in Beijing
On the night of June 3, he went to the hospital to get medicine for his child. Around 10 pm, he was seen standing at the northern entrance of the 301 Military Hospital. As he was chatting with the guard, a martial law convoy came from the west and fired indiscriminately. Struck, the guard staggered like a drunk, and Li quickly steadied him. He had just barely managed to say, “What's going on?” The two men fell to the ground simultaneously, as if they had been fighting.
116. Yang Ruting, male, 41, administrative section chief at the Beijing No.1 Machine Tool Electrical Apparatus Factory Limited Company.
At 11 pm on June 3, Yang went outside for a walk because he was curious what was happening. When he had reached the Fuxingmen overpass, two bullets struck him, one went through his lungs and the other broke an arm. When his remains were discovered, there was a large hole straight through his chest to his back.
117. Wang Qingzeng, male, 34, driver for the Tiantan Staple Food Control Office
Riding to work on his bicycle for the night shift, at 11 pm on June 3, he left his home in the Zhushikou district. When he passed along the section of road facing Rubber Factory No. 8, he was shot through the stomach. Wild gunfire was coming from the south.
118. Zhou Deping, male, age unknown, master's student in the Radio Electronics Department at Tsinghua University
On the night of June 3, he ignored warnings from his school and went out by himself. He was killed by a shot to the head at an unknown location.
119. Wang Wenming, male, 35, mould fitter at the Beijing Qianjin Shoes Factory
At midnight on June 3, when the sound of gunfire reached his home, Wang, who had never been in a war, invited a neighbor to go with him to Zhushikou to see the real thing. They were hit by gunfire. A bullet went through a rib on his left side and out another on his right side. The physician took out over six feet of his intestine, but couldn't go any further. His high fever would not go down. He died the following night. After Wang was cremated, his ashes were returned for burial, like a leaf falling to the base of a tree, to his old hometown of Wen'an.
120. Yin Jing, male, 36, employee at the Ministry of Metallurgical Industry in Beijing and son-in-law of the deputy chief prosecutor of the Supreme People's Procuratorate
On the night of June 3, Yin was in his home on the eighth floor of building #22 in the Muxidi district when he turned on his light and went into the kitchen. A sharpshooter shot him in the head, and he died on the spot.
121. Unknown female, over 60, a housekeeper from Wan County in Sichuan who was serving in building no. 22 in Muxidi in the home of a certain vice minister
According to the testimony of the son of the deceased, on the night of June 3, the sound of gunfire in the street sparked her curiosity. She leaned out from the 14th floor balcony of the vice minister's home looking below. She was discovered by an army sharpshooter who shot her in the stomach. She died on the spot.
122. Zhao Long, male, 21, Beijing resident and high school graduate
At 1 am on June 4th, Zhao left home and met disaster while passing through a street in Xidan. Shot three times on the left side of his chest, he fell over dead. On June 7, his family found his remains at the Beijing People's Hospital No. 2.
123. Lei Guangtai, male, 33, driver for the Xitaishang Village production brigade in Miaocheng rural district in Huairou County, Beijing
That month, the motor transport brigade was undertaking an earth-moving project for the Customs Building under construction at Jianguomen. There was some free time on the evening of June 3, so two of his colleagues invited him to go along to Tiananmen Square to see the “Goddess of Liberty” statue. Around 11 pm, when they had reached the Nanchizi area and were squatting down at the base of the red wall there to smoke cigarettes, army vehicles arrived from the direction of East Chang'an Avenue, accompanied by the sounds of random gunfire. They hurriedly put out their cigarettes and took off. No sooner had he put his head up than a bullet hit Lei. People ran in a panic. Many fell to bullets and blood flowed in the streets. Some people saw him taken away by local residents in a three-wheeled cart. But where did he go? Nobody knows.
124. Zhong Junjun, male, 22, third-year student at the Peking University of Agriculture
During the night of June 3, Zhong rode his bicycle to Tiananmen together with classmates to support the students. Zhong was hit by bullets on the way and sent to the Beijing Emergency Center, but he could not be helped.
125. Gao Yuan, male, 24, a physician in the Department of Traditional Chinese Medicine at the Shijingshan Hospital in Beijing
Late on the night of June 3, while in front of the Fuxingmen subway station, Gao was hit in the chest by two dumdum bullets that went right through him, front to back, ripping open a hole the size of a soup bowl. An elderly man braved the gunfire to take him to Children's Hospital in a three-wheeled cart. He moaned all the way to the hospital and was still breathing when he arrived, but the hospital was full. He died from losing too much blood. On June 9, his remains were transferred to Fuxing Hospital. The mountain of corpses stacked up in the hospital was too much for the morgue, so the bicycle shed became a temporary morgue. Finally, on June 11, his family, after searching for him everywhere, found him stacked up in that makeshift pile of corpses and pulled him out of the pile. His body had decomposed and changed shape. In order to hold a memorial ceremony for him, his work unit was compelled by circumstances to state in written form that he had been accidentally injured.
126. Ni Shilian, male, 24, employee at the China Petroleum & Chemical Corporation Beijing Design Institute
On the night of June 3, seven young people got together to go on a night time bicycle ride. Ni was one of them. When the group got to Xidan around 11 pm, they came under fire from martial law troops. Bullets hit Ni in the chest and abdomen and he fell to the ground. The others scattered. The crowd sent him to the Xuanwu Hospital, where treatment proved ineffective. His work unit did not issue a “death certificate” until 1990. Their conclusion was that he had violated the martial law order and so was responsible for the consequences. A so-called “consolation fund” of 835 yuan, a sum equal to about 10 months of his salary, was sent to his family.
127. Kuang Min, male, 27, engineer at the Beijing Forklift General Factory
On the night of June 3 in Muxidi, a stray bullet struck the small of his back on the right side and went out from his right abdomen. He died soon after arriving at the hospital.
128. Duan Shunqing, male, 30, worker at the Beijing Fangxiuyi Construction Engineering Company.
At 7 pm on June 3, Duan left home on his bicycle. A few acquaintances saw him near the Beijing Telegraph Building after 10 pm Other report seeing him at Liubukou, but by then he had been hit in the streets. His family never recovered his body.
129. He Shitai, male, 31, worker in the foundry workshop at the Beijing No. One Machine Tool Plant
At midnight on June 3, after getting off the night shift, he rode off to visit his father-in-law, who lived in Puhuangyu. His bicycle soon reached the south end of Nanheyan Road, when martial law troops suddenly attacked. A bullet hit him in the temple. Surprisingly, he did not fall right away. Instead, he willed himself to get off the bicycle while still holding stiffly to it. Soon the crowd took him to the Union Medical College Hospital. He stopped breathing and died before reaching the hospital.
130. Zhou Yuzhen, female, 36, confidential secretary in the policy research office in the Structural Reform Department of the National Planning Commission in Beijing
On the evening of June 3, Zhou was at home when he heard intermittent gunfire and went out to the window with her husband and child to take a look. Soldiers raised their guns to spray the residential housing with gunfire. Her husband reacted quickly and pushed the child down as a bullet whizzed past his ear. A bullet exploded in Zhou's head and she died on the spot. The child screamed when she saw her, which drew more bursts of gunfire.
131. Ya Aiguo, male, 22, Beijing resident, temporarily unemployed
On June 3 at about 10 pm, as he was passing through Gongzhufen, Ya's head was half blown off by a hail of gunfire from an army truck on the street. The Beijing 301 Military Hospital diagnosed injury through the brain stem.
132. Song Baosheng, male, 39, employee at the Beijing Glass Factory No. 4, member of the Beijing People's Congress, a “city-wide class shock worker” and “model worker”
On the evening of June 3, he obeyed the martial law order and stayed at home in Muxidi. He went to bed early, but wild bursts of gunfire startled him and kept him awake. He got up to shut the windows. A bullet hit him in the stomach, wounding his intestines. He was sent to the hospital, but entry was prevented by the military, who controlled many hospitals and ordered that rioters not be treated. The hospital physicians and nurses could only watch as he bled, crying piteously until he died. The hospital was not permitted to list “gunshot wound” on his death certificate. They were allowed only to write that he lost too much blood. Song's father wrote many letters to the Beijing Western District Public Security Bureau and Prime Minister Li Peng to complain about the injustice his son had suffered. But that was like throwing stones into the deep sea, for all the answer he ever got.
133. Chen Senlin, male, 36, worker at Factory 707 in Beijing
On the evening of June 3, Chen was shot and killed by martial law troops while riding his bicycle to Xidan. His family, beside themselves with worry, searched all the Beijing hospitals but didn't find him. More than a month later, they narrowed it down to the Beijing No. 2 Hospital. Chen's remains in cold storage had long since decomposed and changed shape. His family was only able to recognize him by his clothing and old scars.
134. Shi Haiwen, male, 20, recent graduate of Shenyang Pharmaceutical College who had come for training as a graduate student at the Beijing Yingyangyuan Institute
On the night of June 4th, Shi was hit by a bullet in the neck and died on the spot. His remains were discovered at the Beijing Jishuitan Hospital.
135. Yang Hanlei, male, 19, student in the chef training class at the Liufang Hotel, Beijing
During the pre-dawn hours of June 4th, when he was walking by the south end of Nanchizi Avenue with his classmates, Yang was shot in the spleen by a spray bullet. He died from blood loss. Surviving classmates notified his family.
136. Name and age not disclosed, male, journalist on the Kailuan Miners News who had been transferred at the time to the New China News Agency
He was killed on June 4th, details unknown.
137. Wang Yaohe, male, 40, chef at a restaurant in Chaoyangmenwai in Beijing.
Wang was murdered in the predawn hours of June 4th, details unknown.
138. Peng Jun, male, 30, staff member at the Beijing representative office of the Xinjiang Production-Construction Corps
At about 6:40 am on the morning of June 5, he left his work unit at Dongdaqiao in the Chaoyang District to buy breakfast. On the way, he was attacked by troops. Two bullets hit him, one in the ankle and the other on the right side of his back.
139. Liu Qiang, male, student at Hebei Normal University
During the student strike, he went to Beijing to take part in the patriotic movement. Liu was lost without a trace during the great massacre of the early morning of June 4th. To this day nobody knows what has happened to him.
140. Su Xin, female, 29, office worker at the China National Nonferrous Metals Import and Export Corporation in Beijing
At midnight on June 3, she left her mother's home in Fuchengmenwai Street, heading home, when she heard waves of rifle shots. Worried about her mother at home alone, she turned back. She was blocked when she reached the southern end of South Lishi Road. Martial law troops came through like a tidal wave, laying down a carpet of fire. People in the crowd were falling one after another. According to an eyewitness, six people were hit by bullets at the same moment. Su was one of them, with a hole drilled through her chest. She was an only daughter.
141. Bao Xiudong, male, 41, manager at certain printing plant on Guloudong Dajie in Beijing
At midnight on June 3, Bao was shot and killed near the Western Returned Scholars Association by the Beijing Hotel.
142. Zhao Dejiang, male, 27, driver at the All-China Federation of Trade Unions and a PLA veteran
Early on the morning of June 4th, Zhao was at the main gate of the All-China Federation of Trade Unions when he saw an old man shot and killed in the street. He hurried forward to rescue the man, but was shot and killed himself.
143. Male, name, age and occupation unknown.
According to multiple eyewitnesses, on the morning of June 4th, the man was shot and killed in front of the main gate of the All-China Federation of Trade Unions. Zhao Dejiang went to rescue him and was also shot and killed.
144. Cao XX, male, 21, draftsman at the Beijing Institute of Surveying and Mapping's Design Office
The night of June 3, in the Xidan District, not long after leaving home, Cao was shot and killed. The Posts and Telecommunications University Hospital notified his family on June 6. They hurried to identify and retrieve his already decomposing remains. When Cao was cremated at Babaoshan on June 7, his ashes were not retained.
145. Cui Linfeng, male, 29, worker at the Sanlihe Clothing Factory in Beijing and member of the Joint Defense Command police auxiliary branch office in Beijing's Xicheng District
At 7 pm on the early evening of June 3, he left home for work. Normally, he should have returned at 2 am Nothing was seen of him for two days. His family went to the factory to search for him and learned that shortly after going on duty, he invited two of his co-workers to ride their bicycles over to Chang'an Avenue to look around. On the way, the three separated. Cui continued riding west where he ran into the tanks. Amidst the bullets, he mysteriously disappeared. Cui's family has searched for him for years, checking all the Beijing hospitals, but they have found nothing.
146. Wang Fang, male, 50, employee at Beijing Coal Mining Machinery Factory
On the night of June 3 in Muxidi, Wang's head was hit by a stray bullet and shattered. He died on the way to the Navy Hospital.
147. Liu Jingsheng, male, 40, employee of the Beijing Railway System
On June 4th, Liu was killed near the Yangfangdian district, details unknown.
148. Zhang Jiamei, female, 61, retired former head of the personnel office at the Administration and Management Bureau of the Ministry of Chemical Industry.
During the night of June 3 while at home in Hepingli, she heard a disturbance on a nearby street. She pushed the window open and poked her head out. She was shot through the heart by a stray bullet and died on the spot.
149. Male, name and age unknown, Department of Electro-Mechanical Engineering student at Jiangnan University in Wuxi City, Jiangsu Province
During the student strike, patriotic teachers and students sent him to Beijing along with several other classmates to present their donations to the hunger-striking students in Tiananmen Square. He never returend.
150. Male, name unknown, 20, People's Armed Police guard at the north gate of the 301 Military Hospital in Beijing
Around 11 pm on the night of June 3, martial law troops used gunfire and explosions to force their way in the direction of Muxidi. The crowd of demonstrators scattered in all directions. The armed policeman, watching people being mowed down like grass, took pity and opened the gate to the hospital and called on the crowd to take shelter inside. This infuriated the troops, who were in a murderous rage, so they sprayed him with gunfire. Bullets went straight through his head and his chest. He died on the spot.
151. Male, name, age and occupation unknown
According to multiple eyewitnesses, he was hit by an army truck while crossing the street and then flattened by an armored car into a mass of smashed flesh and blood. All that was left of him was a hand that had rolled to the side. He seemed to have a flowery shirt on. His scattered remains were not removed until the afternoon of June 5, when they were shoveled up, put into plastic bags and taken away.
152. Male, name and age unknown, cook at the Great Hall of the People
On early morning of June 4th, he left his home at Qianmenkuang Alley to go to work at the Great Hall of the People. He was shot and killed on the way. His family received 10,000 yuan compensation from the government.
153. Yen Wen, male, 22, sophomore in the Peking University Mathematics Department.
Around 1 am on June 4th, Yan was amidst a crowd of people who were blocking trucks full of troops in Muxidi. Just as Yen was helping a journalist set up a camcorder to record these events, a spray of bullets arrived like a swarm of bees and he was hit in the base of his right thigh, smashing his femoral artery.
154. Li Chun, male, 20, chef at the Minzu Hotel in the Xidan District of Beijing
Late in the night on June 3, Li, after getting off the night shift, encountered the rampaging martial law troops. He pushed his bicycle along, unable to ride in the middle of hailing bullets. While walking past the south side of the All-China Federation of Trade Unions Building, a shot in the ribs punctured him.
155. Female, name unknown, 31, employee at a factory in Beijing.
On the early morning of June 5, she left her work to go home after the night shift. While crossing the road near Wukesong, she was flattened by an armored car. Since she was the sister-in-law of a squad leader in the Beijing People's Armed Police and had died a violent death, her death was declared to be accidental and a small pension was given to her family after much negotiation between these two military organs. This was confirmed by a former member of the Beijing People's Armed Police.
156. Du Guangxue, male, 24, printing plant worker at the People's Health Publishing House
At midnight on June 3, Du went on a bicycle ride with friends from Chang'an Avenue down to the Xinhuamen area, where there was a stream of shots and explosions and tank after tank charging east. They quickly turned around, and Du was shot through the temples. Du and his bicycle fell together in the road, with one of his legs still hanging from his bicycle.
According to multiple eyewitnesses, five others were shot at the same time. The crowd loaded them on a bus that had been used as a roadblock and rushed them to the Peking Union Medical College Hospital. Four of them died on the way, including Du. The remaining victim was seriously wounded and probably did not survive.
When his family got the news, they hurried to Peking Union Medical College. Bodies were piled there in a mountain and they couldn't check them one by one. They returned another day and were able to claim his body. His serial number was 30.
157. Sun Xiaofeng, age unknown, student at Beijing Sport University
Sun was killed in the early morning of June 4th, details unknown.
158. Zhao Tianchou, male, 47, repair technician at the Beijing Research Institute of Mechanical and Electrical Technology.
In the early morning of June 4th, he was shot four times at an unknown location –three times in the chest and once in the abdomen.
159. Hu Xingyun, male, age unknown, a student from Sichuan in the 1985 entering class at a certain university in Beijing.
He has been missing for 20 years without a trace.
160. Zhai Shun, male, 30, Beijing resident, occupation unknown
On the morning of June 4th, Zhai was crushed by a police car at Muxidi. This was handled as a traffic accident at the time. Zhai's mother, deeply traumatized, became schizophrenic.
161. Chen Ziqi, male, 31, bus driver on the No. 339 route bus of the Beijing Capital Bus Company
As the driver of the first bus service of the day, Chen left his home to go to work at Liuliqiao on the night of June 3. He did not come home for three days. His family went to all the major hospitals in Beijing looking for him. They finally found his body at Beijing Children's Hospital. His head was distorted and there was a big hole in his chest. His family were finally able to identify him by his bicycle key and clothing. The bus company gave them 800 yuan compensation with these words: if after some years, the government should handle these events differently, then they should apply again according to any new regulations on compensation.
162. Qi Li, male, 22, student specializing in stage design at the Central Academy of Drama
Because he had enthusiastically participated in the student strike, it was not until the early morning of June 4th that he retreated from Tiananmen Square. He was sternly interrogated and, knowing that he could not pass the investigation, hung himself in despair.
163. Wei Wumin, female, age unknown, student in the Theatre Arts Department of the Central Academy of Drama.
Wei actively participated in the student strike and was one of the Tiananmen Square hunger strikers. She witnessed the slaughter on the morning of June 4th. Deep in anger and despair, she jumped in front of a train.
164. Zhu XX, male, age unknown, student in the Physics Department of Beijing Normal University
Zhu was killed in the early morning of June 4th, details unknown.
165. Dai Jinping, male, 27, master's student at Beijing Agricultural University
At about 11 pm on the night of June 3, Dai was shot and killed on Tiananmen Square near the Chairman Mao Memorial Hall. On June 10, Dai's family retrieved his body from the Beijing Friendship Hospital morgue.
166. Zhang Fuyuan, male, 66, Beijing resident, PLA 302 Military Hospital retired worker and Communist Party member
On the evening of June 3, after finishing his night shift, he dropped in at the home of a relative in an alley that ran along the eastern wall of the Beijing Long Distance Telephone Building. Around midnight he heard the popping of tear gas canisters. Gas seeped into the room. Everybody ran to the front door to see what was going on, running into a hail of fire from martial law troops. As the crowd scattered, a bullet penetrated the right side of Zhang's waist, but he forced himself to run away with the others. Soldiers kept chasing them. He fell over when he reached the gate to the courtyard of his relatives' home. Later, an ambulance took him to Jishuitan Hospital, but he had already stopped breathing. His children claimed his body the next day.
167. Li Haocheng, male, 20, student in the Chinese Department specializing in ancient Chinese literature at Tianjin Normal University and secretary of the Communist Youth League branch committee
During the student strike, Li went with over 5000 students and teachers from his school to Beijing to give their support. According to eyewitnesses, early on the morning of June 4th, when troops burst into Tiananmen Square, Li stood in the southeast corner of Tiananmen Square photographing the last retreating students. Enraged, soldiers shot him twice. His school gave his family 2000 yuan in compensation.
168, Chen Zhongjie, male, 31, former employee of a subordinate unit of the former Third Ministry of Machinery Industry in Beijing City
At midnight on June 3, Chen was shot at the southern end of Fuyou Street. The bullet entered through his forehead and exploded at the back of his head. He stopped breathing while being taken to Shiku Hospital behind Peking University.
170. Guo Chunmin, male, 23, teacher at Beijing High School No. 61, at the time studying at the Biology Department of the Shijingshan campus of the Beijing Institute of Education, where he was class leader
At 8 pm on June 3, he left home to go to Muxidi to visit a classmate and did not return. His family went to the Fuxing Hospital and saw his name on a list of the dead posted at the hospital entrance. Squeezed into the bicycle shed and rummaging through several dozen bodies, his family was finally able to locate him. He had been shot twice. He was still breathing when he reached the hospital, but died shortly after from blood loss.
171. Han Junyou, male, 25, former worker at Beijing Leather Shoe Factory No. 1 and later a guard in that factory's security department
On the night of June 3 in Muxidi, a bullet struck him in the head. Han died on the way to Fuxing Hospital. His family later found his remains in the hospital's bicycle shed.
172. Li Tiegang, male, 22, young worker in the water supply workshop in the power plant at the Capital Steel Company in Beijing
On the night of June 3, Li left his home and ran into the large massacre being committed by martial law troops near Fuxingmen. He was shot several times in the shoulder and in the liver.
173. Wang Ying, male, 30, employee at the Beijing Transformer Factory Limited Company
Wang was killed on June 4th, details unknown.
174. Cai XX, male, age unknown, employee at the Commercial Press
Cai has been missing since the morning of June 4th. There has been no news of him since.
175. Wang Junjing, male, over 30, technician at a factory subordinate to the Beijing Instrumentation Bureau near the Baita Temple
At about 10 am on the morning of June 4th, while on the way to work, Wang was shot by martial law troops. A dumdum bullet in the kidney damaged his heart as well. Wang was sent to Peking Union Medical College Hospital. When his relatives came to identify and take away his remains, there were already more than 40 bodies piled up at the hospital.
176. Male, under 20, name and occupation unknown.
During the night of June 3, he was killed east of Muxidi at the intersection of Fuxingmenwai Avenue and Sanlihe Road. The bleeding from a bullet wound to the chest would not stop. He was sent to the Beijing Children's Hospital for emergency treatment, which proved ineffective, and he died. According to eyewitnesses, he was wearing brown and green shorts and a white short-sleeved T-shirt, his bare feet in sandals and he had a wristwatch on. He had no identification on him, so the person in charge at the hospital said that if nobody identified him in four or five days, his remains would be turned over to the anti-epidemic station for cremation, along with fourteen other “unidentified corpses.”
177. Hu XX, male, age unknown, university student in Beijing
His family didn't hear about his fate until two weeks after the massacre. They were sad beyond description, but because they were poor and under pressure from the local government they did not dare to identify his body.
178. Hao Zhijing, male, 30, research assistant at the Science and Technology Policy and Management Research Institute of Chinese Academy of Sciences. Hao had visited the United States in 1988.
At 11 am on June 3, while passing through Muxidi, a stray bullet went through the left side of his chest, killing him immediately. Hao's relatives went to all the Beijing hospitals looking for him. A month later, they discovered his body by chance at Fuxing Hospital.
179. Lin Tao, male, 24, a former PLA scout who had worked at the Beijing Kunlun Hotel
On the night of June 3 after finishing dinner, he was preparing lunch to bring to work the next day, when he heard that martial law troops had entered the city. He left home on his bicycle to go out on the streets and never returned.
180. Li XX, male, about 30, driver for the Beijing Municipal Urban Appearance Enforcement Team
From the night of June 3 into the early morning of the 4th, Li was working on the second floor of the Beijing Municipal Urban Appearance Enforcement Team headquarters on the western side of the Great Hall of the People. He was hit by the gunfire of martial law troops and fell backward instantly into the arms of his office colleagues and died.
181. Zhang Jian, male, 17, sophomore at High School No. 95 in the Xuanwu District of Beijing
On June 4th, he left home to visit his uncle and aunt who lived in Qianmen. On the way Zhang was murdered by martial law troops with a bullet through the heart. He was sent directly to the morgue at Peking Union Medical College Hospital. At noon, his parents discovered that their son had not visited his uncle's home and went to look for him. Finally, wafter searching through three large volumes of albums with photographs of about 60 of the dead, they identified his body
182. Li Ping, male, age unknown, student in the Political Education Department of Beijing Normal University
On the night of June 3, he was shot and killed near the Military Museum, west of the Muxidi Bridge.
183. Ma Jianwu, male, age unknown, student at the Beijing College of Chinese Medicine
Ma was killed on the morning of June 4th, details unknown.
184. Huang Xinhua, male, 25, graduate student at the Chinese Academy of Sciences who had passed the entrance examination in 1988
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