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c******n
发帖数: 5697
1
http://sinosphere.blogs.nytimes.com/2014/06/03/tiananmens-most-
大部分都去投行了
No. 1: Wang Dan
Wang Dan
Sam Yeh/AFP, via GettyImages
Wang Dan
Mr. Wang was a 20-year-old freshman at Peking University in 1989. After the
June 4 crackdown, Mr. Wang initially hid at a relative’s home in Anhui
Province, but he soon returned to the capital, where he was arrested on July
2, 1989. He was sentenced to four years in prison but was released early in
1993. Two years later, after petitioning for the release of others jailed
for their roles in the protests, he was again arrested, convicted of
subversion and sentenced to 11 years in prison. In 1998, ahead of a visit by
President Bill Clinton, he was released on medical parole in 1998 and then
left for the United States, where he enrolled at Harvard University. He is
currently a college professor in Taiwan.
No. 2: Wu’er Kaixi
Wu’er Kaixi
Wally Santana/Associated Press
Wu’er Kaixi
An ethnic Uighur born in China’s far west Xinjiang region, Mr. Wu’er was a
freshman at Beijing Normal University in 1989. He gained prominence during
the protests for publicly rebuking Li Peng, then China’s prime minister,
during a televised meeting with student leaders. After the crackdown, he
evaded the police for 10 days and escaped to Hong Kong, then a British
colony. He later went to France and then to the United States, where he
studied at Harvard and the Dominican University of California in San Rafael.
In California, he was baptized by a fellow student leader in 2002. He now
works as an investment banker in Taiwan. Of the 21 student leaders, he
remains one of the most vocal critics of the Chinese government and has
repeatedly been prevented from returning to China to see his family.
No. 3: Liu Gang
Liu Gang
Reuters
Liu Gang
A graduate of Peking University, Mr. Liu, who was 28 in 1989, was captured
in northern Hebei Province 15 days after the crackdown and was sentenced to
six years in prison for ‘‘counterrevolutionary crimes.’’ Facing
harassment after his 1995 release, he fled to the United States the
following year, where he received political asylum and enrolled at Columbia
University. He has since worked on Wall Street and maintained a blog. In
2011, during messy divorce proceedings, he publicly accused his wife of
being an undercover Chinese spy. Activists in the United States said they
lost touch with him after that.
No. 4: Chai Ling
Chai Ling
Shaun Tandon/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
Chai Ling
Ms. Chai was a graduate student at Beijing Normal University, studying child
psychology, when she emerged as one of China’s most recognizable protest
leaders in 1989. After the crackdown, she and her husband Feng Congde,
another leader wanted by the state, went into hiding for 10 months. They
then escaped to France by way of Hong Kong. She later moved to the United
States, and the two divorced. After earning a business degree at Harvard, Ms
. Chai started a software company with her American-born husband and later
converted to Christianity. More recently, she founded All Girls Allowed, an
advocacy group that campaigns against restrictive family planning policies
in China, which critics say compel couples to abort or abandon female
children.
No. 5: Zhou Fengsuo
Zhou Fengsuo
The New York Times
Zhou Fengsuo
A senior studying physics at Tsinghua University in 1989, Mr. Zhou was a
leader of the Beijing Students Autonomous Federation. The day the wanted
poster was issued, he was turned in by his sister and her husband. He was
imprisoned for a year, and left China in 1995 for the United States, where
he earned a graduate degree in business at the University of Chicago. He
became a Christian in 2003 and has worked in finance in recent years. He is
a co-founder of Humanitarian China, a group that promotes the rule of law
and civil society in China and raises money for Chinese political prisoners.
No. 18: Li Lu
Li Lu
Brendan McDermid/Reuters
Li Lu
An economics student at Nanjing University who went on a hunger strike in
1989, Mr. Li was smuggled out of China after 10 weeks on the run. He later
fled to the United States and attended Columbia University, where he earned
three degrees. He went on to become a successful hedge fund manager and
founded Himalaya Capital in 1997. He helped guide Berkshire Hathaway’s
investments in China, prompting speculative news reports that he was being
groomed to succeed the company’s chairman, Warren Buffett. Of the leaders
who left China, he is the only one who has returned, accompanying Mr.
Buffett on a visit in 2010.
No. 21: Xiong Yan
Xiong Yan
Richard A. Brooks/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
Xiong Yan
A graduate law student at Peking University and a probationary Communist
Party member in 1989, Mr. Xiong was among those chosen to negotiate with the
government. After the crackdown, he publicly renounced his party membership
and went into hiding. He was captured and jailed for 19 months. After his
release, he escaped to Hong Kong in a fishing boat, and was granted asylum
by the United States in 1992. After converting to Christianity, he studied
at Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary in Massachusetts and became a
chaplain in the United States Army, serving a tour of duty in Iraq.
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