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Showing posts with label National Day. Show all posts
Showing posts with label National Day. Show all posts

30 September 2014

这些疯狂照片显示这到底是在香港和这惊人的无人机影片破天揭示到底有多大规模香港的抗议真得是29和30SEP14

香港的人,在各个阶层和行业的大批学生领导,但表示,从北京的杀气统治者,要求从政府和自治的民主。拒绝由警方有时野蛮袭击吓倒,他们没有退缩,和民主到现在包括木偶省长梁振英辞职扩大了他们的要求,他们被允许选择他们的政府。周三,14年10月1日是国庆节,在中国,香港及澳门。香港的反对派是如此强烈,政府已宣布一些正式的庆祝活动被取消。这不会是一个庆祝的专制,独裁的香港政府,毫无疑问,他们会在自己的掩体工作是什么,无疑是一个血腥镇压一拉,详情可放低了姿态,天安门广场在1989年的抗议活动一直和平那么远,但如果被称为神的解放军知道多久的战斗将继续下去。愿上帝赐给香港占据中央民运力量!从+母亲琼斯  .....

催泪瓦斯和胡椒喷雾不能沉默示威者呼吁更大的自主权。下一步是什么?

|星期一2014年9月29日下午3点35分美国东部时间
香港防暴警察消防催泪瓦斯在抗议者早在星期一,9月29日沃利桑塔纳/美联社
 
香港-通常是一个有秩序的金融避风港,爆发在上周末,警察使用催泪瓦斯和胡椒喷雾驱散了为期三天的学生静坐所占用的中央商务区。数千名示威者已经部署了雨伞,以保护自己免受化学侵蚀,有些人配音的伞革命 -和甚至拿起手中的行动“不拍”的姿态从弗格森,密苏里州的抗议活动
这些抗议的由学生小组去年组织的运动的高潮“占领中环”,要求自由选举和香港,这是由共产党控制在北京更多的自主权。
争议焦点是保证中国香港做的时候花了缰绳从英国早在1997年,在所谓的“一个国家,两种制度”的交易,香港被允许保留其普通法制度,并享受更多的权利比在大陆(那里的抗议活动的消息一直积极审查)。到2017年,香港居民希望他们能够选举自己的行政长官会同行政顶部他们所谓的特别行政区的代表。但现在,中国似乎违背了其交易的精神。习近平曾坚决拒绝公开提名候选人,并说他们将继续在北京中央委员会进行审批,
政府的镇压已经成功在分散的示威者,谁仍然在街头,和声援游行正在发生在城市在世界各地,包括弗格森。下面是从周末总结的照片。
警方胡椒喷雾活动家谁闯入政府总部上周六,苹果日报/美联社
 
示威者阻止警方总线上的香港主要干道之一。 Vicnent宇/美联社
 
学生们用即兴抵御催泪瓦斯和胡椒喷雾。黄马爷-E /美联社
 
防暴警察正面朝下抗议者。共同社/美联社
 
学生领导的示威在周一扩大整个香港。黄马爷-E /美联社
 
雨伞。这么多的雨伞。黄马爷-E /美联社
 
亲民主示威者加油周一城市的旺角区。森特宇/美联社
 
示威者涌入市中心金融区在星期天。文森特宇/美联社
 
这也是为什么在遮阳伞 ​​。余伟/美联社

詹姆斯·西

气候台监制
詹姆斯西是资深制作人对气候服务台和促进生产的母亲琼斯。他写道:北京模糊(企鹅2008),并制作获奖的电视在他的家乡澳大利亚。他去过吉,还邀请了自己的感恩节晚餐后,错误地接受了邀请,从多年的神秘陈德良家庭。 的RSS |

马克Murrmann

照片编辑器
马克Murrmann的照片编辑器,在母亲琼斯。欲了解更多他的故事,请点击这里的RSS |

这个惊人的无人机影片揭示到底有多大规模香港的抗议是真

|星期二二○一四年九月三十日下午12点26分美国东部时间
 
 
在香港的抗议活动表明没有停止的迹象,因为示威者成千上万继续从北京政府要求更大的自主权。此视频,特色Storyful,由Nero陈(上传到自己的Facebook账户上的9月29日),报价一窥机芯的大小。明天是国庆节,在中国公众假期。活动人士说,有机会的抗议活动可能会肿胀,甚至超越你可以在这个视频中看到。

These Insane Photos Show What the Hell Is Happening in Hong Kong & This Stunning Drone Footage Reveals Just How Massive Hong Kong's Protests Really Are 29&30SEP14

THE people of Hong Kong, lead by students, but represented by huge numbers of all classes and professions, are demanding democracy from their government and autonomy from their murderous overlords in Beijing. Refusing to be cowed by sometimes brutal attacks by the police, they are not backing down, and have expanded their demands that they be allowed to elect their government democratically to now include the puppet governor c y leung resign. Wednesday, 1 OCT 14 is National Day in the prc, Hong Kong and Macau. The opposition in Hong Kong is so strong the government has announced the cancellation of some of the official celebrations. It will not be a celebration for the autocratic, dictatorial Hong Kong government, no doubt they will be hunkered down in their bunkers working on the details of what will no doubt be a bloody crackdown a la Tiananmen Square in 1989. The protest have been peaceful so far, but if the pla is called in God knows how long the fighting will go on. God Speed Hong Kong OCCUPY CENTRAL Pro-Democracy forces! From +Mother Jones .....

Teargas and pepper spray aren't silencing protesters' calls for greater autonomy. What's next?

| Mon Sep. 29, 2014 3:35 PM EDT
Hong Kong riot police fire teargas at protesters early on Monday, September 29. Wally Santana/AP
 
Hong Kong—usually an orderly finance haven—erupted over the weekend as police used teargas and pepper spray to break up a three-day student sit-in that occupied the central business district. Thousands of protesters have deployed umbrellas to protect themselves from the chemical attack—some people are dubbing it the Umbrella Revolution—and have even picked up the hands-up "don't shoot" gesture from protests in Ferguson, Missouri.
The protests were the culmination of a campaign organized last year by the student group "Occupy Central," calling for free elections and more autonomy for Hong Kong, which is controlled by the Communist Party in Beijing.
At issue are assurances China made to Hong Kong when it took the reins back from Britain in 1997. Under the so-called "one country, two systems" deal, Hong Kong was allowed to keep its common-law system and enjoy greater rights than those on the mainland (where news of the protests has been aggressively censored). By 2017, Hong Kong residents hoped they would be able to elect their own chief executive—the top representative of their so-called Special Administrative Region. But now, China appears to be reneging on the spirit of its deal. President Xi Jinping has firmly rejected open nominations for candidates, and says they will continue to be vetted by a central committee in Beijing.
The government's crackdown has been unsuccessful in dispersing the protesters, who are still out on the streets—and solidarity marches are taking place in cities around the world, including Ferguson. Here's a wrap-up of photos from the weekend.
Police pepper spray activists who forced their way into the government headquarters on Saturday. Apple Daily/AP
 
Protesters block a police bus on one of Hong Kong's major thoroughfares. Vicnent Yu/AP
 
Students are using improvised defenses against teargas and pepper spray. Wong Maye-E/AP
 
Riot police face down protesters. Kyodo/AP
 
The student-led demonstrations expanded throughout Hong Kong on Monday. Wong Maye-E/AP
 
Umbrellas. So many umbrellas. Wong Maye-E/AP
 
A pro-democracy protester refuels in the city's Mongkok district on Monday. Vicent Yu/AP
 
Protesters flood the central financial district on Sunday. Vincent Yu/AP
 
Here's why the umbrellas. Vincent Yu/AP

James West

Climate Desk Producer
James West is senior producer for the Climate Desk and a contributing producer for Mother Jones. He wrote Beijing Blur (Penguin 2008), and produced award-winning TV in his native Australia. He's been to Kyrgyzstan, and also invited himself to Thanksgiving dinner after wrongly receiving invites for years from the mysterious Tran family. RSS |

Mark Murrmann

Photo Editor
Mark Murrmann is the Photo Editor at Mother Jones. For more of his stories, click here. RSS |

This Stunning Drone Footage Reveals Just How Massive Hong Kong's Protests Really Are

By

| Tue Sep. 30, 2014 12:26 PM EDT
 
Protests in Hong Kong show no sign of stopping, as hundreds of thousands of demonstrators continue to demand greater autonomy from the government in Beijing. This video, featured on Storyful, by Nero Chan, (uploaded to his Facebook account on September 29), offers a glimpse into the magnitude of the movement. Tomorrow is National Day, a public holiday across China. Activists say there's a chance the protests could swell even beyond what you can see in this video.