203, Cheng Renxing, male, 25 years old, died of shooting;
204, Dai Jinping, male, 27 years old, died of shooting;
205, Li Haocheng, male, 20 years old, died of shooting.
Appendix Two: List of 202 People Killed in the Massacre
Collected by the Tiananmen Mothers' Group (1989-2011)
Provided by Ding Zilin and Jiang Peikun
This marks the first time the full updated list of Tiananmen victims, edited and in some cases expanded here from the original, has been published in English.
1. Lü Peng, male, 9, third-grader at Shunchenggen Elementary School in Beijing
On June 3, around midnight, this mischievous child who had not gone to sleep at his bedtime snuck out of the house without his parents' knowledge to join in the patriotic demonstrations of the grown-ups. Near the Fuxingmen Bridge intersection he was shot in the chest by martial law troops firing wildly. The angry crowd put his body on the roof of a convertible, parading it up and down the street as a demonstration of how even small children were in danger during the Chinese military's murder of the innocents.
2. Xia Zhilei, female, 22, university student in southern China
A little past 4 a.m. on June 4th, she followed other students as they retreated from Tiananmen. Reaching Dongdan, they were met by gunfire. Staggering and falling, she shouted, “Hurry! Hurry! Find a place to rest. I think I’ve been shot.” She held her chest tightly as blood kept gushing out from between her fingers. In the confusion and darkness, martial law troops were charging towards the group from all sides. People had no choice but to keep walking and carry the unconscious girl with them. A few minutes later, momentarily recovering consciousness before dying, she said to those around her: “Classmates! My blooming season is over. Xia Zhilei means “summertime flower bud,” which withers and dies very quickly.”
3. Liu Junhe, male, 56, small business owner in Beijing, personal details unknown
“Fresh, thin-skinned, thick-fleshed watermelons!” he called out again and again. “If they aren't sweet or crisp, you don't have to pay!” Early on the morning of June 4th, he was at his vendor's stall as usual next to the watchtower on Qianmen Avenue. Suddenly a line of army trucks drove by. With a rat-a-tat, the streetlights were shot out and the slaughter reached its climax in the dark. One after another, demonstrators fell to the ground, while the others scattered in all directions. As he rushed to pack up his cart, he was hit in the face by a random gunshot. Blood shot out from his neck. Shortly after he died at the Beijing Friendship Hospital.
4. Jiang Jielian, male, 17, sophomore at the high school attached to Renmin University of China.
He left home at 10:30 p.m. on the night of June 3. About 40 minutes later, while he was standing outside the building at Fuxingmenwaidajie No. 29, he was hit by wild gunfire from PLA martial law troops,. Bystanders immediately brought him to the nearby children's hospital. The death certificate stated that he was “dead on arrival.” He was cremated at the Babaoshan Funeral House. His ashes are kept at home.
5. Wang Nan, male, 19, sophomore at Yuetan High School in Beijing
Going out with his camera to “record history,” he was hit in the head by a stray bullet around midnight at the southern end of Nanchang Avenue. Those nearby shrieked and wanted to help him, but martial law troops fired shots in the air to stop them, until he was dead.
As they did with many victims, soldiers carelessly buried him in a field in front of Beijing Middle School No. 28 on the western side of Tiananmen Square. Three days later, the decaying bodies began to smell. After the school made a request to the authorities, all the bodies were allowed to be dug up and quickly cremated.
6. Xiao Jie, male, 21, journalism student at Renmin University.
He participated in the Tiananmen hunger strike and saw many of his fellow students injured in the bloodbath on the streets. With feelings of grief, indignation and fear, he bought a train ticket home to Chengdu so that he could leave the Beijing nightmare as soon as possible.
However, at 2:10 am on June 5, while he was about to cross the street at the Nanchizi Street intersection, he accidentally stepped on a red warning line that the martial law troops had painted on the street. A soldier yelled “Halt!”, but he continued on, panic-struck. Gunfire struck from behind. He spun half-way around and fell. A red flower erupted on his chest. The crowd screamed and rushed forward. They lay him out quickly on a flatbed three-wheeled cart and rushed him to Gong'an Hospital. At 2:55, emergency treatment having failed, he stopped breathing.
7. Xie Jingsuo, male, 21, sophomore in the Light Industry College of the Beijing Lianhe University
As he was recording history with his camera at the Liubukou intersection in Xidan during the early morning of June 4th, he was attacked by a ferocius band of martial law soldiers, who showered him with their clubs.. Lying there with an assault rifle pressing down on the left side of his chest, he screamed for mercy but it was already too late. Only after two shots were fired was the crowd able to take him to the emergency treatment center.
8. Xiao Bo, male, 27, lecturer in chemistry at Peking University
Xiao Bo, a precocious student, tested into the Peking University Technology and Physics Department at the age of 16.
Late on the night of June 3, disregarding his own personal safety, he passed through streets filled with heavy gunfire to Muxidi to help his students return to campus, when a stray bullet penetrated his chest. He was immediately carried to Fuxing Hospital for emergency treatment, which proved ineffective. He died soon after – on his birthday, leaving twin sons not quite three months old.
9. Jin Ying, male, 18, Beijing, occupation unknown
On the evening of June 5, he went out with a colleague and never returned home. His family visited all the major hospitals in Beijing, but they heard nothing about him until seven days later someone found him by chance at the Erlong Street Hospital in the western district of Beijing. The mortuary personnel at the hospital explained to his family that he was so small and thin that they thought he was a child. His body was covered with small white flowers, his body riddled with three bullets. After breathing his last, he was dropped in a flower bed in Muxidi. Judging from all the blood he had lost, he must have struggled for some time.
10. Lu Chunlin, male, 27, graduate student at Renmin University
Just before he died – late on the night of June 3, at Muxidi in the city center – he raised his blood-soaked body and asked passersby to send his ID card back to his school. University officials identified his body, and he was cremated. His relatives took his ashes back to his hometown in Jiangsu for burial.
11. Zhang Xianghong, female, 20, student in the International Politics Department, specializing in the International Communist Movement, at Renmin University
Along with her elder brother, his wife, and several other people, she left the home of relatives in Zhushikou at 11 p.m. on June 3, but martial law troops separated the group. The trailing light from flying bullets made webs of fire. Running hand in hand with her sister-in-law, they hid in bushes to the west of Daqianmen. The bullet struck the main artery on the left side of her chest and went out through her back. The crowd carried her to a city emergency medical center where she was treated. Early in the morning of June 4th, after heartrending screams, she died.
12. Cheng Renxing, male, 25, English major in the Foreign Languages Department of Central China Teacher's College in Wuhan, graduate student at Renmin University with a double major at the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe Studies Institute.
He and several classmates were battling the siege at the flagpole in Tiananmen Square on the morning of June 4th. When the tanks rolled in, he was shot in the stomach. He screamed in pain and was taken to Beijing People's Hospital. There were too many people waiting, and he died from loss of blood. The family lost their only university student, an award winner and an excellent student, a good leader and a member in good standing of the Communist Youth League.
13. Wang Yifei, male, 31, employee of the Datong Company in Zhongguancun, Beijing
On the night of June 3, he was suddenly hit by a bullet at the entrance of the headquarters of Academia Sinica at Sanlihe. It went through his lung on the left side of his chest. He died on the spot.
14. Yang Yansheng, male, 30, employee at Sports News in Beijing
While helping injured people at the Zhengyi Road intersection on the morning of June 4th, he was shot in his lower abdomen with a dumdum bullet. He went down on his knees as his intestines splashed out. Like many other wounded, he was taken by the crowd to Beijing Hospital for emergency treatment, but he could not be helped.
15. Zhang Jin, female, 19, graduate of the Beijing Foreign Trade Center's Foreign Affairs Service School and trainee at the International Trade Center
In shock, she was caught in the crossfire around midnight on June 3, struck from behind, even as her boyfriend grabbed her and ran withher into a nearby alley. Her head instantly exploded. She was taken to the Posts and Telecommunications Hospital, but she was already dead.
16. Duan Changlong, male, 24, graduate of the Tsinghua University Chemical Engineering Department, specializing in Applied Chemistry, and a class section leader.
He left home on his bicycle to “witness history” and came upon a confrontation between a large crowd of unarmed civilians and heavily armed soldiers. Bullets flew like rain and people were cut down like grass. People ran in all directions. Just as he turned around, a bullet hit him on the left side of his chest. An examination revealed that he was shot by a small caliber weapon at extremely close range. His ashes were interred at the Wan'an Public Cemetery in the western suburbs of Beijing.
17. Wang Weiping, female, 25, intern at Beijing People's Hospital Department of Gynecology and Obstetrics, recent graduate of Beijing Medical University
Bravely rushing to the “front lines” to rescue the injured on the night of June 3, she was hit in the neck by a bullet. She was taken to Beijing Medical University hospital for emergency treatment, but died there. Her ashes were interred at the Wan'an Public Cemetery with the simple inscription on her headstone “Born December 21, 1964. Killed in an accident June 3.”
18. Wang Jianping, male, 27, driver for the southern suburbs fleet of the Beijing Gas Company
Joining the blockade of military vehicles on the night of June 3, he was shot on the left side of his chest at the Xidan intersection. With great loss of blood, he died the following morning. After his cremation, he was carelessly buried for some unknown reason in a deserted field in the suburbs of Beijing
When he was killed, he left behind a pair of twin girls, only eight months old.
19. Wang Peiwen, male, 21, student in the Youth Work Department of the China Youth Academy of Political Studies
A demonstrator retreating from Tiananmen Square early on the morning of June 4th, he was in the first row of a long column of students, passing through a human wall made of troops and their dark gun barrels. Feeling lucky to have escaped danger, he was knocked down and crushed by a tank charging ahead rapidly into the Liubukou intersection. His so-called remains were a mash of human flesh and blood inlaid in the pavement at the intersection.
20. Dong Xiaojun, male, 20, student in the Youth Work Department of the China Youth Academy of Political Studies
A demonstrator retreating from Tiananmen Square early on the morning of June 4th, he was at the tail end of a long column of students. He too passed through a human wall made of troops and their dark gun barrels. Likewise, just as he was feeling lucky to have steered clear of danger, a tank came up behind him. He was knocked down and crushed. His remains were scraped together bit by bit, and after cremation, were laid to rest at his family home in Yancheng, Jiangsu.
21. Yuan Li, male, 29, engineer at the Beijing National Electronic Industry Automation Research Center.
He had made a trip as an engineering expert to Germany and was preparing to make a trip to the United States. A little past 11 p.m. on the night of June 3, he left his house and walked to Muxidi. Troops attacked the crowd. In the midst of the wild shooting, a bullet hit him in the throat and came out the back.
With no identification on him, he was pronounced dead at the Navy General Hospital and listed as “anonymous corpse no. 2.” For more than 10 days, his family looked for him everywhere, visiting 44 hospitals all over Beijing. Eventually they found out “the circumstances of his disappearance.” They brought his body home on June 19.
22. Ye Weihang, male, 19, junior at Beijing No. 57 High School, class leader, and student association cadre
Shot at Muxidi in the early morning, he was listed as “anonymous corpse no. 1” after the Navy General Hospital determined he was dead. He was found to have three bullet wounds: an open wound in his left arm, a closed wound in his right chest and a closed wound at the right rear side of his head. On June 5, his family learned “the circumstances of his disappearance.” They recovered his remains and had them cremated, and his ashes rest at home.
23. Wu Guofeng, male, 21, student in the Industrial Economics Department of Renmin University
During the 1989 student movement he was elected a member of his university's Students’ Autonomous Federation preparatory committee. He participated in the five days and nights of the Tiananmen hunger strike.
On the evening of June 3, disregarding repeated warnings from the school, he grabbed his camera and rode his bike to the scene to record history. The army butchered him, though it is not known exactly where. According to an analysis, after he fell to the ground with a gunshot wound, he was shot again at close range and, lying face up, stabbed with a military bayonet. He had grabbed the bayonet in his death throes, enraging his executioner.
24. Wang Chao, male, 30, an employee of the Beijing Zhongguancun Sitong Company. Wang was killed the night of June 3. The place and details are not known. He was at first listed as “anonymous corpse no. 3” by the Navy General Hospital.
25. An Ji, male, 31, Editor of Township Construction, a magazine of the Ministry of Construction's China Construction Technologies Research Center in Beijing
On June 6 at midnight, seven young people were going home after a meeting. When they passed through the Nanlishi intersection, they were attacked by troops. Swept by dense gunfire, all five of the young men were shot down. The two frightened young women knelt and begged loudly for mercy over and over and were spared their lives. The names of the other six were Wang Zhengqiang, Wang Zhengsheng, Yang Ziming, Yang Ziping, Yang Yuemei, and Zhang Xuemei.
26. Wang Zhengsheng, male, 20, employee at the Beijing North China Material Supply Station
He was killed at the same time as An Ji. He was shot in the back and was sent to the hospital together with his elder brother Wang Zhengqiang – who, though seriously wounded, was able to recover from his wounds.
27. Yang Ziping, male, 26, worker at Beijing Machinery Factory No. 1
He was also killed at the same time as An Ji. He was shot in the back and sent together with his elder brother Yang Ziming to Fuxing Hospital. His elder brother Yang Ziming was seriously wounded, but recovered from his nearly fatal wounds.
28. Qian Jin, male, 21, student at the University of International Business and Economics in Beijing
Riding a bicycle on June 3 at about 10 p.m. with a classmate surnamed Yuan at the Beifengwo intersection, he headed in the direction of Muxidi. He was turning toward home when he ran into a hail of gunfire, sweeping across the street like a fan. He and Yuan were shot at the same moment as others in flight also fell around them. The crowd took them to the Railroad General Hospital for emergency treatment. He was wounded in several places, and an artery had been shattered. He died on the morning of June 5 from loss of blood.
29. Liu Hong, male, 24, graduate student in environmental science at Tsinghua University
He was in the long column of students retreating from Tiananmen to Qianmen early in the morning of June 4th when soldiers shot him in the abdomen. He fell to his knees and his intestines spilled out. His classmates tried to stuff his intestines back inside him, they fell out again, this happened several times. His classmates could only press a small washbasin upside down on his wound, and he died in the arms of his classmates as they carried him to the hospital.
30. Zhong Qing, male, 21, student in Precision Machinery Department at Tsinghua University
On the night of June 3 in Muxidi, he ran back and forth as gunfire swept the area and was finally hit. His head exploded and half of his face was torn off. Many of his classmates could no longer recognize him. A little later, after searching the pockets of his trousers, they were able to determine just who it had been.
31. Zhou Deshi, male, 20, recent graduate of the Chinese Academy of Sciences Biophysics Research Institute, already assigned to Nanjing University
He was shot and killed on the night of June 3. No details are known.
32. Unknown male, age unknown, ticket seller on Beijing bus route 101
At 5 a.m. on June 4th, his dead body lay to the north of the Hongmiao intersection in the eastern suburbs of Beijing. This information was provided by several eyewitnesses.
33. Zhang XX, male, 53, section chief in the Infrastructure Department of the Thermoelectric Plant in the eastern suburbs of Beijing
At 5 a.m. on June 4th, his dead body lay to the north of the Hongmiao intersection in the eastern suburbs of Beijing. This information was provided by several eyewitnesses.
34. Yang Minghu, male, 42, employee of the China Council for the Promotion of Foreign Trade Patent Section Legal Office
On the morning of June 4th, he suddenly came under fire while standing in front of the main gate of the Ministry of Public Security on Chang'an Avenue. He was hit in the abdomen by dumdum bullets, which are forbidden by international treaty, smashing his bladder and pelvis. He died two days later in great pain at the hospital, staring with his two eyes wide open.
35. Zhuang Jiesheng, male, 27, salesperson at the Wudaokou Department Store in Beijing
He left home during the afternoon of June 3 but never returned. His family searched for him far and wide until June 11, when they saw the photographs of a series of “anonymous corpses that have not been claimed,” provided to the public by Tongren Hospital in Beijing. They had found him.
36. Yuan Minyu, male, 35, electric welder at the Beijing Geological Instrumentation Factory
At midnight on June 3, when he was somewhere between Sanlihe and Muxidi, he was struck in the heart and throat by two bullets. Emergency treatment proved ineffective and he died on the afternoon of June 4th at Beijing Children's Hospital.
37. Du Yanying, male, 29, worker at a company subordinate to the Beijing Reform Through Labor Bureau.
At 2 a.m., he was hit in the waist by a dumdum bullet near the Dabei Photography Studio at Qianmen. His heart and liver were blown apart. He died on the morning of June 5.
38. Lu Jianguo, male, 40, driver for the Beijing Travel Bureau
Around 11 p.m. on June 3, he was struck in the chest by dumdum bullets at No. 27 Juchang Road near the Sanlihe Market. The bullet blew a hole in him. He died on the spot.
39. Yu Di, male, 32, engineer at the Solar Power Research Institute in Beijing who, working together with colleagues, had invented a thermoelectric membrane and won a prize for this work
During the standoff between martial law troops and tens of thousands of Beijingers along the stretch of road between Nanchizi and the National Museum of China, around 2 a.m. on the morning of June 4th, bullets pelted down and explosions lit up the sky in four furious waves of assault. He fell, completely covered in blood. He was taken by others in the crowd to Peking Union Medical College Hospital. A bullet that had entered at his lower left rib and exited by the upper right rib damaged eight of his organs, including his liver, kidneys and lungs, as well as injuring his backbone. Physicians spared no effort, working on him for more than 20 days, including four major operations and the removal of a kidney. Still, his high fever did not go down. On the night of June 30, he died in pain.
40. Li Changsheng, male, age unknown, custodian at the Beijing Lianhe University Automation Engineering Department library
He left home at dawn on June 4th and went to Tiananmen Square to support the patriotic students. He was never seen again. His body was never found.
41. Xi Guiru, female, 24, employee of the Beijing Exhibition Center Labor Services Company
At dawn on June 4th, at the north entrance of February 27 Theater Road, a bullet hit her in the left shoulder. She died at Beijing People's Hospital.
42. Dai Wei, male, 20, cook at Hepingmen Roast Duck Restaurant in Beijing
The evening of June 3, he went to work at the usual time. When he reached the entrance of the Beijing Minzu Hotel, he was dragged along by a panicked crowd of fleeing people being chased by troops. He was hit in the back, lost too much blood, and died in the hospital.
43. Wu Xiangdong, male, 21, employee of the Beijing Dongfeng Televsion Factory
A little past 11 p.m. on the night of June 3, he ran into troops at the end of Muxidi Bridge and was hit in the neck by a dumdum bullet. He was sent to Fuxing Hospital for emergency treatment, but had lost too much blood. Before he died, he wrote the address of his work unit on a piece of paper currency and asked a university student to notify his company of his death.
44. Liu Jianguo, male, 35, salesperson at the Beijing Great Wall Trench Coat Company
He got a bullet in the chest around midnight on June 3 at the Xidan Road intersection. He was sent to the Erlong Road Hospital for emergency treatment but could not be saved.
45. Lai Bi, male, 21, of the Zhuang ethnic minority, student at Beijing Medical University
He was shot at the intersection of West Chang'an Avenue and South Chang'an Avenue around 2 a.m. on June 4th. The 10 mm caliber bullet went into his forehead and went out the back of his head, leaving a hole the size of the bullet. On the morning on June 6, the hospital, under political pressure, made out a death certificate stating that he had been “accidentally injured.”
46. Dong Lin, male, 24, employee at the Beijing Eastern District People's Court
He was hit in the ribs on the right side of his chest by a dumdum bullet around 11 p.m. on the night of June 3, on the eastern bank of Muxidi. According to several eyewitnesses, four other people were also hit in the dense hail of bullets that struck him. Blood gushed out of one, who was hit in an artery in his thigh, his whole body twitched all over for a while and he died on the spot. The crowd took the other three to the Fuxing Hospital for emergency treatment. Physicians there worked day and night but could only save one of them.
47. Guo Anmin, male, 23, recent graduate in jet propulsion at Beihang University, had just passed the entrance exam to study for his master's degree
On the early morning of June 4th, he died a violent death at an unknown location, shot in the forehead, with half of his face blown away. Nobody knows just who, in the confusion that followed, took his body and put it in the hall of the main building of China University of Political Science and Law. Several days later, his school retrieved his body.
48. Lin Renfu, male, 30, recent Ph.D. in materials science at the University of Science and Technology in Beijing. He had just obtained his passport and was about to go to Japan in October for further study.
Together with his classmate Wang Kuanbao, Lin retreated from Tiananmen Square early on the morning of June 4th. He had just reached the Liubukou intersection when he was knocked down and crushed beneath a pursuing tank.
49. Sun Yanchang, male, 24, driver at the Beijing Construction and Furnace Building Company
He left home on the night of June 3 to look for his younger brother, who had not yet come home. When he got to the south side of the main station for the Hongmiao 110 bus, in the eastern suburbs of Beijing, a spray of gunfire hit him. The crowd brought him to the Chaoyang Hospital for emergency treatment. After six months of treatment, he died.
50. Qian Hui, male, 21, recent graduate specializing in news collection and editing at the Beijing Broadcasting Institute
On the morning of June 5, as he walked out the main gate of his school to take stock of the situation, he was shot in a hail of fire from a tank. The artery in his thigh tore and a jet of blood spurted from his body. His bladder was damaged. His mind was still clear, so he warned the students coming to help him, “Watch out! The military vehicles aren't gone yet!” Everybody helped to carry him back into the school, with the trail of his blood stretching for over 300 feet long. He stopped breathing before he reached the hospital.
51. Zou Bing, female, 19, student at the Beijing Broadcasting Institute
She escaped the slaughter of June 4th, but was interrogated because of her active participation in the student movement. She was unable to avoid the roadblocks and had no way to escape. In the middle of September, she climbed to the roof of a 13-story tower on her campus, leapt into the air and ended her life. Her suicide caused a sensation that forced the school, under considerable political pressure, to slander her as having mental health problems. In fact, she was a healthy, optimistic girl who, several days before she died, had mailed a note to her surviving parents, apologizing that she had not lived up to the love and care they had given her since her childhood.
52. Pu Changkui, male, 47, of the Korean ethnic minority, performer in the China National Ethnic Song and Dance Ensemble
During the night of June 3, somewhere on the road between Xidan and Fuxingmen, Pu was shot in the back left part of his head by a bullet that emerged on the right side of his neck. He died on the spot. His ashes were interred at Jinshan Cemetery without any grave marker or inscription.
53. Bian Zongxu, male, 40, manager at the Xinjiekou Mechanical and Electronic Products Supply and Sales Company in Beijing
On the morning of June 4th, he was standing in front of a furniture shop in Xidan when a stray bullet went through his head. He died on the spot. His ashes were interred in the Taiziyu Public Cemetery, where a headstone was erected in his name. He had twins, a boy and a girl.
54. Tian Daomin, male, 22, student in the management department at the University of Science and Technology in Beijing
He followed the advice of his school and stayed in his dormitory room all night to write his graduation thesis, but on the morning of June 4th, he went out the main gate of his school and ran to Liubukou to see what was happening. A tank barging through the intersection flattened him to death.
55. He Jie, male, 23, graduate student at the Institute of Computing Technology at the Chinese Academy of Sciences.
On the evening of June 3, together with many classmates, he went to Tiananmen to support the student protest. He had just arrived at Nanchizi when he was shot.
When he started high school at the age of 15, he impressed Tsinghua University so much that the usual rules were waived to admit him as an underage university student. Later, he advanced rapidly, again contary to standard procedure, to become a master's student at the Chinese Academy of Sciences, where he was called a boy wonder. His premature death was like a comet that flashed through the heavens.
56. Song Xiaoming, male, 32, technician at Factory 283 of the Second Academy of China Aerospace in Beijing
On the evening of June 3, he was on the sidewalk, on the southwestern side of the Wukesong intersection in a big crowd, yelling slogans of protest that drew a hail of fire from soldiers on army trucks. Several people fell, and he was among those shot. The big artery in his thigh was severed and he bled heavily. He was taken to the emergency room of the nearby 301 Military Hospital. A soldier who followed him gave orders to the hospital, “Don't treat him! Don't give him blood transfusions.” The physicians and nurses who had gotten ready to save him could only watch as he died before dawn. His mother could not bear what had happened to her son. Her kidneys failed and she soon followed him into death.
57. Liu Yansheng, male, 37, worker at the Beijing Household Electric Appliances Research Center
On the night of June 3, at the Palace of Nationalities intersection on Chang'an Avenue, a stray bullet pierced his abdomen. He was sent to the Posts and Telecommunications University School Hosptial but could not be saved. He bled to death.
58. Wen Jie, male, 26, MA from the Chinese Literature Department at Peking University, teacher at the Beijing Institute of Fashion Technology
He was arrested by the authorities after the June 4th massacre because he had actively participated in the student movement. He suffered from acute abdominal pain while in prison and was diagnosed with late-stage intestinal cancer. He passed away shortly after being released on bail.
59. Li Huiquan, male, 35, journalist at China Metallurgy News in Beijing
At dawn on June 4th, he was killed while passing through the south side of Liubukou. No details are known. On June 11, following leads, his parents found his corpse at the China Posts and Telecommunications University Hospital. It was headless.
60. Zhang Runing, male, 32, deputy director of the Russian-language service at Radio China International in Beijing
At about 10 p.m. on the night of June 3, while walking from his home to his work unit, he was shot while crossing the street near the Muxidi bridge. A dumdum bullet blew a hole in his abdomen. The crowd rushed him to the Fuxing University Hospital where treatment proved ineffective. His remains were interred in the Futian Public Cemetery in the western suburb of Beijing.
61. Liu Fenggen, male, 40, worker at the Drilling Equipment Factory of the Ministry of Geology
His sense of morality and justice led him to leave his home, around 10 p.m. on the night of June 3, to rescue injured people in the Xidan area. In a dense hail of gunfire, he was hit three times – in his back, his arm and his heart – by bullets that went all the way through his body. He died at the Beijing Erlong Hospital.
62. Li Meng, female, 32, assistant researcher at the State Language and Writing Reform Commission
At dawn on June 4th, in a pile of dead bodies, she found her husband, who had been seriously wounded by a dumdum bullet. She took him to a hospital for emergency treatment where he eventually survived. However, she suffered a mental breakdown amidst all the bloodshed. In late 1990, she went missing near her home. Her family looked for her for many years, but they didn't see her alive or find her dead body. Because of this, the Ministry of Public Security issued a “Notice of Death” and canceled her household registration.
63. Bi Yunhai, male, 22, worker at the street committee office at Guang'anmennei in Beijing
He left home on the night of June 3 and did not return. His family found his body the next day at Fuxing Hospital. His abdomen had burst open after being hit by dumdum bullets. His ashes were interred at the Jinshan Cemetery in the western suburbs of Beijing.
64. Liu Hongtao, male, 18, student in the Optical Engineering Department at the Beijing Institute of Technology
At 1 a.m. on June 4th, he was killed near the Cultural Palace of the Nationalities. His school retrieved his body from the Posts and Telecommunications University Hospital.
65. Zhou Xinming, male, 16, student at a certain high school in Beijing
Zhou was killed in the early morning of June 4th. There is little personal information available about him. He is buried in the Jinshan Public Cemetery in the western suburbs of Beijing.
66. Wang Gang, male, 20, technician at the Beijing Coking Plant
The afternoon of June 3, he left home to work the night shift. At 7 a.m. on June 4th, while he was buying breakfast in front of the main gate of the factory, a long line of army trucks screamed by at high speed. Hundreds of people waited on the side for a chance to cross. At this moment, an army truck crashed into the crowd., people screamed and ran off in all directions. Three of them were not able to escape and were crushed to death, including the young technician Wang Gang.
Following the tragedy, the soldiers boarded the vehicle that followed and left. To vent their anger, the frustrated crowd shouted slogans and set the deserted blood-stained military truck on fire.
67. Zhang Lin, male, 37, Beijing resident, personal information unknown
Killed on June 4th. No details are available. His remains were buried in Jinshan Cemetery in the western suburbs of Beijing.
68. Han Ziquan, male, 38, electrician at the University of Technology in Beijing
He was accompany a relative to work a little after 5 a.m. on June 4th. Less than half an hour later, he was hit in the neck and died near the Agricultural Exhibition Center.
69. Li Dezhi, male, 25, graduate student in the Department of Applied Physics in the Beijing Posts and Telecommunications University
He was killed early on the morning of the 4th. No details are available. His relatives retrieved his remains from Fuxing Hospital.
70. Zhou Yongqi, male, 32, head of the motor group at the Beijing Spring Plant
He was shot near the Beijing Union building a little past 11 pm on June 3. The bullet entered the left side of his chest and exited from his right lung. He was sent to Fuxing Hospital for treatment, but it was too late.
71. Nan Huatong, male, 31, driver at the Beijing Wallboard Factory
He left home and took a walk down Chang'an Avenue to see what was happening in the square, around 5 a.m. on the 4th. He never returned. Two days later, his family recognized a photo of his remains at Peking Union Medical College Hospital. A dumdum bullet had entered his left rear shoulder blade and blown out his entire chest cavity.
72. He Anbin, male, 32, Beijing resident, personal information unknown
He was killed on June 4th, no other details are known. His remains were interred at the Taiziyu Public Cemetery in suburban Beijing.
73. Zhong Guiqing, female, 31, Beijing resident, personal information unknown
She was killed on June 4th, no other details are known. His remains were interred at the Taiziyu Public Cemetery in suburban Beijing.
74. Mu Guilan, male, 48, finishing department worker at State Textile Plant No. 3 in Beijing
Going out to buy breakfast around 6:30 am on the 4th, he walked by the Chaoyangmen overpass, where he ran into a long column of tanks and combat vehicles coming from Tong County into town at high speed. Flaunting their strength, they randomly took shots at pedestrians streaming by. A slug coming in from an angle at his head killed him instantly. After the scene calmed down, a pedestrian took his picture and mailed it to his family.
75. Xiong Zhiming, male, 20, student in the Economics Department of Beijing Normal University
According to several eyewitnesses, he and a female classmate had taken refuge in an alley, but a group of soldiers pursued them and shot them – it was the night of June 3. He turned around to help his classmate, who was hit first, when he, too, was shot. He was subject to a bloody and brutal attack that spared no part of his body. His other classmates only recognized him by his clothing.
76. Zhang Weihua, male, 24, master's student at the State Oceanographic Administration Marine Forecasting Center in Beijing
Early on the morning of June 4th, he was hit in the abdomen by a bullet on Lishi Road and died on the spot.
77. Zhang XX, male, 19, student in business management at the College of Commerce
Soldiers attacked him, and the long line of students retreating from Tiananmen to Liubukou, with clubs, early on the morning of the 4th. He turned and ran, but received a blow to the top of his head. He fell to the ground. A gun barrel was lowered to his throat and fired. Fresh blood spurted and splashed. He stopped breathing while people were carrying him to the Beijing Emergency Medical Center.
78. Gong Jifang, female, 19, student in business management at the College of Commerce
In the long line of students retreating from Tiananmen to Liubukou on the morning of the 4th, she ran into a fierce attack. A dumdum bullet hit and severed her left arm. She fell down, covered by a cloud of poision gas, and lost consciousness. The cause of death, given on her death certificate, was lung erosion caused by poison gas.
79. Jiang XX, male, 26, master's student at the China School of Journalism
He was shot and killed in Jianguomenwai on the evening of June 3.
80. Liu Chunyong, male, 24, bath attendant at the Nantong Service Complex in the Tianqiao district of Beijing
On the evening of June 3, Liu was at the main terminal for the No. 15 bus line, near the Tianqiao district, when a spray of bullets from PLA troops advancing from the south hit him. His head was blown open.
81. Chen Laishun, male, 23, photography class in the Journalism Department at Renmin University
On the evening of June 3, on the roof of an apartment on the western side of the Great Hall of the People, he raised his camera to record the bloodbath when he was shot in the head by a marksman's bullet. He died instantly.
82. Liang Baoxing, male, 25, driver for the Huafeng Sewing Machine Factory in Beijing
On the evening of June 3, near the terminal for the No. 15 bus, near the Tianqiao district, a bullet went through his cheeks. He died on June 5.
83. Luan Yiwei, male, 35, engineer at the Steel Design Research Institute in Baotou, Inner Mongolian Autonomous Region
During the pre-dawn hours of June 4th, Luan, who had come to Beijing on a business trip, went to Nanchizi area to see the street scene amidst clouds of gunsmoke. He was hit in the waist by a stray bullet. He died at Tongren Hospital after emergency treatment failed.
84. Su Jinjian, male, 25, graduate in electronics from the Beijing Vocational High School and self-employed clothing entrepreneur
Under circumstances still unknown, he was hit in the head by a bullet on the night of June 3 and taken to Beijing Friendship Hospital, where he soon died. The hospital labeled him “anonymous corpse no. 1.” His father spent two weeks searching for him at dozens of hospitals.
85. Zhang Luohong, female, 30, employee at the Beijing General Political Department Sanatorium for Retired Cadres
She was killed on the night of June 3 in Muxidi, details unknown.
86. Wang Zhiying, male, 35, lathe operator and well-known “model worker” at the heavy vehicle manufacturing factory's drive axle factory of the Beijing Third General Machinery Factory
He and his wife were going at midnight on June 3 from his mother-in-law's home in the Xuanwumen District back to their own home in Dongzhushikou. Almost home, just as they were crossing the intersection, they ran into martial law troops heading north and sweeping the streets with gunfire. Though the couple tried to dodge the bullets, and then to hide behind a van, a bullet drilled into him from the side, hitting his carotid artery.
His wife screamed and threw herself on top of him. But the bullets were still flying, as the soldiers filled the van with holes. He was sent to the Qianmen Hospital, but could not be helped because of all the people who were being treated. He died due to massive blood loss, the first victim that night to die at Tongren Hospital.
87. Wang Hongqi, male, 21, worker at the Leather Research Institute in the Haidian District of Beijing
At midnight on June 3, Wang finished his shift and was returning home when a bullet went through his chest. The next day, the family received a phone call from an eyewitness and went to the Navy Hospital to identify and recover his remains.
88. Li Shuzhen, female, 51, cafeteria worker at a certain work unit of the Beijing Water Supply Company
Li and her husband went out on their bicycles on the night of June 3. Near the Military Museum they were attacked by martial law snipers. Three bullets hit her. On the way to emergency treatment at the Posts and Telecommunications University Hospital, she stopped breathing.
89. Ma Chengfen, female, 55, retired cadre of the People's Liberation Army General Political Department in Beijing. Ma had joined the PLA in 1949, then crossed the Yalu River to fight in the Korean War. In 1953, after the war, she returned to China and became a PLA railroad engineer corps soldier.
As was her habit during the summertime, she went out with neighbors on the night of June 3 to relax in the cool courtyard of the compound where she lived. She was in high spirits when disaster struck. Bullets from a passing convoy struck her in the abdomen. Her intestines spilled out on the floor. This accidental murder deeply shocked her husband. Several times he wrote letters to higher authorities, in accordance with military regulations, to report on this unjust situation. He wanted the matter to be examined, but it was like throwing a rock into the ocean. There were no two ways about it. In an instant, this outstanding servant of the People's Republic had become a disgrace to the People's Republic. In 1992, the family had her buried at their own expense in the Jinshan Public Cemetery in Beijing.
90. Guo XX, male, 22, Beijing resident, personal details unknown
A little past 9 p.m. on June 3, he was shot and killed at the intersection of Fuxing Road and Yongding Road. The details are unclear.
91. Yang Zhenjiang, male, 32, service worker at the Huaiyangchun Restaurant in Beijing
On the early morning of June 4th, Yang and some colleagues ran into fierce sprays of bullets from army trucks passing through Muxidi. A bullet hit Yang in the base of his left thigh, breaking an artery. He was sent to the Navy Hospital for emergency treatment that proved ineffective. It wasn't until June 6 that Yang's family found his body. His cremated remains were stored in the Columbarium at the Wan'an Public Cemetery.
92. Li Li, female, 20, student at the Chengdu Electronics and Communications Engineering Institute in Sichuan
She went with her boyfriend on the morning of the 4th to the square by South Renmin Road in Chengdu. Suddenly, conflict broke out between the People's Armed Police anti-riot squad and a large crowd of demonstrators. The police threw several tear gas grenades to disperse the crowd. Li was caught as she fled the plaza, beaten by police and fainted. Soon the crowd took her to the hospital for emergency treatment, but her wounds were too serious and she died that night. Her school held a memorial meeting for her. Her parents came from Guizhou to retrieve her ashes so they could be buried in her hometown.
93. Kou Xia, female, 31, teacher at the Xisibei Nursery School, Beijing
During the night of June 3, while she was walking on the sidewalk across the street from the Military Museum, a bullet went through her abdomen. She was immediately sent to the Railroad Hospital for emergency treatment but could not be saved. She died at 5 p.m. on June 4th.
94. Han Qiu, male, 25, salesperson in the sales department in Jiamusi City Nailery in Heilongjiang
He came to Beijing on business in the late period of the student strike. Early on the morning of June 4th, he was shot in the head at an unknown location.
95. Liu Jinhua, female, 34, employee at the Third Cadre Retirement Home of the People's Liberation Army General Political Department in Baishiqiao, Beijing
At 9 p.m. on June 3, she went with her husband from their home in Balizhuang to Yongdingmenwai, to her aunt's home, to get medicine for their child. While passing through Xidan, the couple ran into martial law troops who were slaughtering innocent people and returned home. They waited until 11 p.m. and went out again, and again ran into the gunfire of martial law troops, this time near Yanjing Hotel in Muxidi. Pedestrians fell one by one. The couple fled into a small alley next to Muxidi Building 21. The soldiers chased them, still shooting. Shot in the forehead, she died instantly. Her husband, hit by several bullets, was seriously wounded. He was taken to the hospital and saved.
96. Wang Tiejun, male, age unknown, employee in the Muxidi passenger office of the Beijing Railway Bureau.
He was worked the night shift at his work unit on June 3. Out of curiosity, he went up the roof with a telescope to watch the martial law troops enter the city. A sharpshooter saw him and killed him with one shot.
97. Huang Tao, male, age unknown, a university student in Beijing from Zhangjiagang in Jiangsu
Huang was killed in the early morning hours of June 4th, details unknown.
98. Tao Zhigan, male, 24, a university student in Beijing from Tiantan County in Zhejiang.
Tao was killed in the early morning hours of June 4th, details unknown.
99. Xu Jianping, male, 19, a university student in Beijing. Personal details unknown.
Xu was killed during the pre-dawn hours of June 4th. Bullets blew away half his face and then he was flattened by a tank. His flesh and bones were inlaid into the street.
100. He Guo, male, 27, worker at a grain shop in the Yuetan Street neighborhood of Beijing
Killed at midnight on June 3, or in the predawn hours of June 4th. He was shot and killed as he passed through Muxidi. His remains were found at Fuxing Hospital.