by G. Jack Urso
On the evening
of June 3, 1989, I was working the overnight shift at WQBK-1300 AM. At the
time, the station was located on an isolated hill outside Albany, New York. The
networks were buzzing with news of the violent crackdown on the pro-Democracy
protestors in Tiananmen Square. The teletype clacked away every few minutes
with the latest reports. In the days before the World Wide Web, there was
little to do but wait for the next report to come through.
Looking for more
news beyond our network feed, I began to surf the frequencies on the satellite
dish. Eventually, I picked up an audio feed of an English-speaking announcer
for Radio Beijing who reported the news of the massacre at Tiananmen Square.
I’m not sure if this was a part of a network news feed or just a stray signal I
caught, but I felt an immediate connection to my fellow broadcaster. It was
also obvious to anyone who followed the news that the Communist Chinese government’s
response would fall harshly on those who broke the wall of silence. I wondered
if I would have the same courage had I been in his place.
The audio I
recorded from the broadcast is available below with some rare photographs from
the massacre, due to which the video is age-restricted by YouTube. Click on the “Watch on YouTube” link below to view it.
Knowing the
historical significance of the broadcast, I transferred it from reel-to-reel
tape to a cart. Carts look like 8-track cartridges and come in varying lengths.
They were used for playing everything from station IDs and bumpers, to
commercials, public service announcements, interviews, and music. Looking back
at the state of radio news gathering in 1989, with no computers or Internet, and
only antiquated relics like teletype, carts, and reel-to-reel, I still marvel
at how we got any work done.
Producing
History
I produced my
first report on this broadcast in 2000 while taking a course in Producing Historical Documentaries for
Radio with Professor Gerald Zahavi at the University at Albany
while working on my master’s degree. The web page for the course, at the time
of this writing, is still available at the above link. There, you can find my
original short audio documentary, “The Lost Voice of Radio Beijing,” which I
converted and uploaded to YouTube, below:
Professor Zahavi
also broadcast my report on his Talking
History program on WRPI-90.9 FM, the radio station for the Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute, in 2000 and 2001.
Transcription of Original Radio Beijing Broadcast
- June 3, 1989:
This is Radio
Beijing. Please remember June the third, 1989. The most tragic event happened
in the Chinese capital, Beijing.
Thousands of
people, most of them innocent civilians, were killed by fully armed soldiers
when they forced their way into the city. Among the killed are our colleagues
at Radio Beijing.
The soldiers
were riding on armored vehicles and used machine guns against thousands of
local residents and students who tried to block their way. When the army
convoys made a breakthrough, soldiers continued to spray their bullets
indiscriminately at crowds in the street.
Eyewitnesses say
some armored vehicles even crushed foot soldiers who hesitated in front of the
resisting civilians.
Radio Beijing
English Department deeply mourns those died in the tragic incident and appeals
to all its listeners to join our protest for the gross violation of human
rights and the most barbarous suppression of the people.
Because of this
abnormal situation here in Beijing, there is no other news we could bring you.
We sincerely ask for your understanding and thank you for joining us at this
most tragic moment.
While working on
the report for the class, I contacted Radio Free Asia in Washington D.C. in the
hope that someone there might have some information about the announcer.
Through an interpreter, I was able to speak with a former Radio Beijing
reporter who was actually at Tiananmen Square the evening of June 3, 1989. She
didn’t know who the announcer was but said she would look into it and let me
know if she found out anything.
![]() |
| Fig. 2: FCC Restricted Radio Telephone Operator Permit: Issued January 31, 1986. |
About six months
later, well after the course had ended, I received an e-mail from my contact at
Radio Free Asia who informed me of that the announcer’s name is Yuan Neng (a
mistranslation of Chen Yuanneng) and he was transferred from his job for
broadcasting the report. The script was by Wu Xiaoyong, Deputy Director of the
English Language Service at Radio Beijing. His father, Wu Xueqian, at the time
was a Senior Council Vice-President. According to my contact, after the
broadcast, Wu was put under house arrest for two to three years and later moved
to Hong Kong. His father’s connections likely played a part in his release.
Recent
researched confirmed my contact’s report of Wu Xiaoyong in the document, The Persecution
of Human Rights Monitors: December 1988 to December 1989, by
Human Rights Watch (December 1989). The
eventual fate of the announcer Yuan Neng is not reported. [See updates below.]
China is seeking
a balance between its capitalist ambitions and cultural traditions; however,
one wonders if the threat the Chinese Communist government perceived in 1989 was
not so much a fear of revolution per se, but rather that the moral imperative
through which all governments derive their power, the consent of the people,
would vanish in the face of true competition in the marketplace of ideas.
UPDATE June 4,
2015: Through various sources, including a reader of Aeolus 13 Umbra
and a Canadian film documentarian, it has been reported that Yuan Neng is alive
and living in the United States, but does not wish to discuss the events of
June 3-4, 1989, at this time.
UPDATE February
2019: The Lost Voice of Radio Beijing announcer’s full name is
reported as Chen Yuanneng (see comments, below). My previous reporting of Yuan
Neng (see above) is attributed to mistranslations in my communications with
Radio Free Asia personnel in late 2000.
UPDATE May 2019: Photos
of Chen Yuanneng and Wu Xiaoyong posted by 881903.com, the official website of
Commercial Radio Hong Kong (thank you Aeolus 13 Umbra reader Lu butsch for the link). Chen Yuanneng is reported by 881903.com
to have been working in the "high-tech industry" in Los Angeles"
at the time of the publication of the article, May 13, 2014. The images below
are from the report.
Interview: Pan Zhiqian for 881903.com:
For many years online spread an excerpt, the content has the reporter of Chinese Official Broadcasting station, breaks through the information blockade in 64 the same day, in the central media condemned that the government suppressed the student. This reporter to tell truth, has paid the heavy price, his for 25 years accept the visit for the first time, the matter that the review had that morning.After 1989 had the June 4 incident, for in the inland official media, strove for one-and-a-half points of freedom of the press, Wu Xiaoyong used four years of personal freedom to exchange. In the early morning, he has written a news release, Beijing standard time 7:00 am, gave the radio announcer to report.Content that at that time broadcast: “Here is Beijing International Broadcasting Corporation. Please remember on June 3, 1989, had the most shocking tragedy in the capital Beijing of China. Thousands of people, mostly is the innocent resident, was entered the fully-armed soldiers in city to kill forcefully . . . The soldiers are driving the tank, tries to stop the resident and student who with the machine gun strafe. Even if after the tank opens the channel, soldier still at a promiscuous manner the person on opening fire street . . . The Beijing international radio station English department deeply mourns slain the person in this tragedy, and appealed to all our audience: With us condemned that this type tramples the human rights shameless and suppresses the people's act barbarically.“This news by Chinese official International Broadcasting Corporation, from Beijing to international broadcast. Wu Xiaoyong was broadcasting station English department deputy director, on the morning of June 4 rode the bicycle to go to work at that time, witnessed on the way the serviceman and tank suppressed the resident. He returns to the broadcasting station, learned that has the colleague, because the internal organs were punctured dead by the bullet, had the colleague relative dead.At this time he decided that must tell a truth. “Human died, did we tell a truth not to be good? This truth we said today that broadcast.“ 16 lines of news releases, were Wu Xiaoyong wrote with two minutes in the grief and indignation fast. Wu Xiaoyong said that he did not approve then student movement, moreover held the post of the state workers more than ten years, understood the consequence of publishing absolutely, but he cannot accept the People's Liberation Army to attack the people.“The Chinese People's Liberation Army is the army of people, the army of your people hits the people, is this does do? Army not such dry, has killed the human, the tank such presses.” Soon Wu Xiaoyong then carried off, in not hands over to catch and not have the prosecution, not to have under the sentence, around was detained Canada puts under house arrest for four years.We asked that he does have the regret, he said: “Now thinks, if makes me make one again this matter, perhaps I this. But said from another angle, I thought that I have not made the mistake any matter, I handled the matter that a reporter should handle.”Wu Xiaoyong who in the recent 20 years moved to the U.S. sighs with regret and spoke the price of lie to be big in the foreign country, reviewed is speaks the truth price to be big in China. The same day radio announcer Chen Yuan can, be punished afterward, was transferred a news post, afterward went through many places to Los Angeles is engaged in the high-tech industry.On the same day the sound recording of news has spread online, Chen Yuan can be called "on electric wave keeps off the person of tank.” Wu Xiaoyong and Chen Yuan and former colleague Rose still held an office in the International Broadcasting Corporation, she said the media person, regardless of works for whom, should maintain the conscience. Until now, whenever with the new colleague, as well as wants to enter line of young people to chat, Rose still proud to they spoke Wu Xiaoyong and Chen Yuan can the story.
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Nice article. There are good information about China Radio International. It is useful for china people. I like this kind of Blog. Thanks for admin. He is great. If anyone like to get informatics blog about China Radio International please click here.
ReplyDeleteBeijing radio
Thank you for this post. Am I to understand that to this day no one knows what became of Yuan Neng? Seems like it is something worth investigating further! Someone should take the time to tell his story.
ReplyDeleteThank you for asking! To my complete surprise, I only learned within the past month that Yuan Neng is indeed still alive! I did not have the pleasure of speaking with him myself, but a documentary filmmaker who became interested in my story contacted me and used her resources to track him down - and he is living in the United States.
ReplyDeleteAccording to my contact, Mr. Neng does not feel the time is yet right for him to discuss his story. He may still have family in China, and very likely saw some horrible things that evening, so we have to respect his wishes.
I do not feel I am liberty to identify Mr. Neng's location, nor the documentary filmmaker who approached me about his story. If it all goes well, in a couple years we may finally see a documentary about "The Lost Voice of Radio Beijing," and I truly hope so. It is a story long overdue to be told to an wider audience. Hopefully, Mr. Neng will wish to share his story with the filmmaker, and I truly hope he does so. Every year that passes, the Tiananmen Square Massacre gets less and less coverage and the valiant sacrifice of so many, including Mr. Neng who had to flee his homeland, becomes forgotten - but never here!
Du Ping(杜平) (now in Phonixtv凤凰卫视) worked as the Radio Beijing's correspondant at that time. He wrote a book in 2017 which introduces more about what happened to Radio Beijing that night. Wu Xiaoyong(吴晓镛), the head of English service of Radio Beijing in 1989, witnessed many people's injury and death on his way to Radio Station. The news was written by him and should have been read by him as well. But his colleagues at radio station thought the price that Wu had to pay would be unbearable. So, Chen Yuanneng(陈原能)read the news. Before June 4th incident, Chen Yuanneng was regarded as a backbone of the station. Radio Beijing had planned to send him to America for further trainning. After June 4th, he was once banned from travelling abroad and lost his job.Wu Xiaoyong now worked as the head of Phonenixtv American Channel(凤凰卫视美洲台).And what happened to Chen Yuanneng later remains a secret even in Chinese World.I think many kind-hearted people choose to hide the truth so as to protect him
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for your update! So, Chen Yuanneg is his full name . . .30 years later I am still learning something new. I am very grateful for your information. A Canadian documentarian you contacted me about this story tracked Chen down, but he understandably refused an interview. Wu and Chen were very brave that day and they are overdue for recognition for their courage.
DeleteDear Mr. Urso
ReplyDeleteYou can find a photo of Chen Yuanneng(陈原能)in the following webpage, he was living in the United States in 2014. Perhaps he is living in the United States now.
http://www.881903.com/Page/ZH-TW/News_Featuredetail.aspx?itemid=717916&csid=901_3580
WOW! I can't tell you how much it means to me to be able to see their pictures AFTER 30 years! You made my day. I was able to have the article translated and it confirmed what I was told previously by another Aeolus 13 umbra reader, that Chen Yuanneng is indeed living in the US. Great info and thanks for the link!
Deletehttps://books.google.ru/books?id=wyBYDwAAQBAJ&lpg=PA271&ots=WIF9zuhNKv&dq=%E6%9D%9C%E5%B9%B3%20%E5%87%A4%E5%87%B0%E5%8D%AB%E8%A7%86%20%E6%88%91%E5%9C%A8%E5%AA%92%E4%BD%93%E8%BF%99%E4%BA%9B%E5%B9%B4&pg=PA75#v=snippet&q=%E6%99%93%E9%95%9B&f=false
ReplyDeleteHere's the book written by Du Ping... His description of what happened that night starts from Page 75...Under the subtitle: 那一夜我全然无眠 (That night I couldn't sleep at all)
Thank you for the reference! I can't read Chinese, but maybe I can find someone to translate that passage for me.
DeleteGreat blog, great work! The June 4th massacre will never be forgotten and the truth will be known by the world in the future ---- because of so many people like you who never give up.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Mr. Urso!
Zhanwang
A former journalist from china
June 4th, 2019
Thank you Zhanwang. Coming from a former journalist from China, your comments mean a lot to me.
DeleteThe FCC license is interesting. The same one we use as pilots internationally. Did you need it for the job at the time? Alex.
ReplyDeleteAt the time I got it in college I was told it was required if I wanted to be an on-air announcer or board operator, but after the job at the station noted above no other station ever asked me for it, nor did they seem to care. So, maybe there was a change in law. Now I'm curious!
Deletehttp://www.nationalradioexaminers.com/page.php?id=33
DeleteThanks for the link. It would be great to get behind the mic again someday!
DeleteThank you for sharing this recording. At the time I was an avid listener of shortwave radio and a collector of QSL cards. I remember listening this broadcast from Radio Peking.
ReplyDeleteThank you for reading and listening! We are among a dwindling group of radio hounds.
Delete"His father, Wu Xueqian, at the time was a Senior Council Vice-President."
ReplyDeleteWu Xuqian is the Vice Premier of the State Council, not the Senior Council Vice-President.
Thank you for that clarification. I am reporting it as Human Rights Watch reported it. It seems like something that may have been "lost in translation," as the saying goes.
DeleteThe State Council is China's cabinet, the country's highest administrative organ. The head of the State Council is the Premier, and the Vice Premier is the deputy head of the State Council. The State Council has several Vice Premiers, each of whom is in charge of a specific area. And in 1989, Wu Xueqian was the Vice Premier in charge of foreign affairs.
DeleteGood clarification. Thank you.
DeleteThank you for your great service and for preserving history! I, a foreigner, was at Tiananmen that night and in the early morning hours of June 4, 1989, I eye-witnessed the butchery at Muxidi. I vividly remember the days, weeks and months before and thereafter. I will never forget.
ReplyDeleteThank so much for reading and sharing your experience. I can't forget that evening either, listening to it as it unfolded. It seems to be aside of China too many in the West seem to want to forget, much like the Chinese government would like everyone to forget.
Delete