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Chinese official purged after Tiananmen Square massacre dies aged 90

Bao Tong had been a leading voice for political reform in the Chinese Communist Party.

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Bao Tong, a leading voice for political reform in the Chinese Communist Party who was purged after the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre, has died aged 90.

Son Bao Pu said in a tweet that his father died peacefully on Wednesday morning. Mr Bao had been living in a Beijing suburb under tight police supervision.

He joined the Communist Party as an underground member prior to its 1949 seizure of power under Mao Zedong, and rose to be a top aide to former Communist Party general secretary Zhao Ziyang, who was deposed after expressing support for the student-led protests that called for more personal rights and an end to corruption and dictatorship.

China Obit Bao Tong
Bao Tong was an aide to the late reform-minded former Communist Party general secretary, Zhao Ziyang, whose photo he is holding (Ng Han Guan/AP)

Mr Bao Pu moved to Hong Kong where he published works on the inner workings of the Communist Party prior to a sweeping clampdown on free speech in the semi-autonomous Chinese city.

Mr Bao Pu’s Hong Kong-based company is best known for publishing a posthumous series of interviews with Mr Zhao.

Along with Mr Bao Pu, now a US citizen, Mr Bao Tong leaves a daughter, Bao Jian.

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