Sabtu, 10 Agustus 2019

Hong Kong Protesters Defy Beijing Warnings, as Police Fire Tear Gas - The New York Times

HONG KONG — Defying warnings from China of a crackdown if they continued more than two months of protests, young demonstrators blocked a vital tunnel under Hong Kong’s Victoria Harbor on Saturday, barricaded a traffic intersection and set fires outside a police station in a shopping district popular with tourists.

The Hong Kong police force said in a statement that the fires in the Tsim Sha Tsui district of the city posed “a serious threat to the safety of everyone at the scene.”

Police officers fired tear gas in several locations as a day that began with a show of peaceful defiance outside the headquarters of China’s military garrison descended into an evening of clashes, panic and widespread disruption.

Image
CreditJerome Favre/EPA, via Shutterstock

Thousands of activists continued a sit-in at Hong Kong’s international airport, one of the world’s busiest air-travel hubs, on the second day of what they said would be a three-day occupation. The airport demonstration, unlike scattered and often-chaotic protests on the Kowloon Peninsula on Saturday evening, has so far been peaceful.

Stores along Nathan Road, normally crowded with evening shoppers and tourists, closed their doors as the police moved into the area, charging into passers-by caught up in a melee that was shrouded in clouds of tear gas.

Amy Havart, a 32-year-old Hong Kong resident, said she had been leaving a hotel on Nathan Road after drinks with friends when hotel staff members “told us that the police are dropping tear gas outside; we don’t know what is happening at all.”

Image
CreditLam Yik Fei for The New York Times

She said she could not see any protesters or acts of violence so could not understand why there were so many police officers.

“We are all just here trying to have some fun tonight. So why are the police here?” she asked. “I don’t know what is happening to this city. This is just heartbreaking to see.”

[What’s going on in Hong Kong? Here’s how the protests have evolved.]

Assailed for days by China’s propaganda machine as violent thugs who must be stopped, Hong Kong’s protest movement — a largely leaderless jumble of groups and causes — started the day with a display of what activists say was their peaceful intent. Several thousand people marched in an orderly procession past China’s military headquarters in the former British colony.

Image
CreditLam Yik Fei for The New York Times

That protest march in Central District, billed by organizers as a “family friendly” event, featured parents, baby strollers and children with balloons, and avoided incendiary slogans about “retaking Hong Kong” that have angered China’s governing Communist Party.

“Xi Jinping should come and take a look at us here, now, and then say whether we are hooligans,” said Ina Wong, a 34-year-old designer, referring to China’s hard-line leader. Ms. Wong took part in the rally along with her husband, a civil servant, and their 2-year-old son.

But the mood turned grimmer as darkness fell and the Kowloon Peninsula, across Victoria Harbor, became the focus for a new round of protests, which, unlike the morning rally in Central, had not been authorized by the police.

Image
CreditLam Yik Fei for The New York Times

The number of protesters was far below the huge demonstrations last month, and Saturday evening’s events in Kowloon were driven largely by groups of a few hundred activists who roamed from area to area in an effort to avoid arrest for participation in an unauthorized gathering. After one group blocked a tunnel under the harbor from Kowloon to Central in the early evening, a different group occupied the entrance to the Lion Rock Tunnel, under a mountain in Kowloon.

The blocking of roads and tunnels recalled some of the disarray that convulsed Hong Kong on Monday, when a wave of protest rallies and strikes bought much of the city to a standstill, with the police and demonstrators clashing in several areas. Monday’s unrest prompted a barrage of warnings from the Communist Party in Beijing and its allies in Hong Kong that further unrest would not be tolerated.

On Saturday, party-controlled newspapers in Hong Kong published what they said was an open letter signed by more than 700 patriotic residents voicing support for the city’s police, whom protesters have accused of brutality, and demanding that the local government “swiftly stop this chaotic situation.”

Image
CreditAnthony Wallace/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

The letter, and a series of small counterprotests in support of the government, followed a demand this past week from Beijing’s top official responsible for Hong Kong that China’s supporters there speak out against the protest movement and mobilize to resist any concessions to its demands.

Those demands include the resignation of Hong Kong’s chief executive, Carrie Lam, as well as an independent inquiry into the police’s conduct and the full withdrawal of the extradition bill that sparked the protests.

China’s characterization of the Hong Kong protests as “turmoil” — the word it used to describe protests in Tiananmen Square in Beijing in 1989 — has fueled rumors that another crackdown was being planned. But few expect China to send in the People’s Liberation Army, as it did to crush the student-led Tiananmen movement 30 years ago.

Watched by a lone Chinese soldier with an assault rifle guarding the gate to China’s military compound in Central, the morning protesters marched without incident past the garrison, shouting, “Go Hong Kong! Go Hong Kong! Fathers and mothers please preserve our future!”

They ended their parade outside the offices of Hong Kong’s Legislative Council, a body that helped to spur the protest movement by moving in June to adopt legislation that would allow extradition to mainland China. Mrs. Lam, the chief executive, has since suspended the bill, but she has resisted demands that it be formally withdrawn.

Many in Hong Kong are not willing to accept Mrs. Lam’s assurances that the bill is “dead.”

“People don’t trust the government. This is the main problem,” said Ken Lin, an unemployed 39-year-old office worker who helped organize the Saturday march. “The government only obeys Beijing, not what the people of Hong Kong want.”

Image
CreditJerome Favre/EPA, via Shutterstock

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https://www.nytimes.com/2019/08/10/world/asia/hong-kong-protests.html

2019-08-10 14:41:53Z
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Hong Kong Protesters Defy Beijing Warnings, as Police Fire Tear Gas - The New York Times

HONG KONG — Defying warnings from China of a crackdown if they continued more than two months of protests, young demonstrators blocked a vital tunnel under Hong Kong’s Victoria Harbor on Saturday, barricaded a traffic intersection and set fires outside a police station in a shopping district popular with tourists.

The Hong Kong police force said in a statement that the fires in the Tsim Sha Tsui district of the city posed “a serious threat to the safety of everyone at the scene.”

Police officers fired tear gas in several locations as a day that began with a show of peaceful defiance outside the headquarters of China’s military garrison descended into an evening of clashes, panic and widespread disruption.

Image
CreditJerome Favre/EPA, via Shutterstock

Thousands of activists continued a sit-in at Hong Kong’s international airport, one of the world’s busiest air-travel hubs, on the second day of what they said would be a three-day occupation. The airport demonstration, unlike scattered and often-chaotic protests on the Kowloon Peninsula on Saturday evening, has so far been peaceful.

Stores along Nathan Road, normally crowded with evening shoppers and tourists, closed their doors as the police moved into the area, charging into passers-by caught up in a melee that was shrouded in clouds of tear gas.

Amy Havart, a 32-year-old Hong Kong resident, said she had been leaving a hotel on Nathan Road after drinks with friends when hotel staff members “told us that the police are dropping tear gas outside; we don’t know what is happening at all.”

Image
CreditLam Yik Fei for The New York Times

She said she could not see any protesters or acts of violence so could not understand why there were so many police officers.

“We are all just here trying to have some fun tonight. So why are the police here?” she asked. “I don’t know what is happening to this city. This is just heartbreaking to see.”

[What’s going on in Hong Kong? Here’s how the protests have evolved.]

Assailed for days by China’s propaganda machine as violent thugs who must be stopped, Hong Kong’s protest movement — a largely leaderless jumble of groups and causes — started the day with a display of what activists say was their peaceful intent. Several thousand people marched in an orderly procession past China’s military headquarters in the former British colony.

Image
CreditLam Yik Fei for The New York Times

That protest march in Central District, billed by organizers as a “family friendly” event, featured parents, baby strollers and children with balloons, and avoided incendiary slogans about “retaking Hong Kong” that have angered China’s governing Communist Party.

“Xi Jinping should come and take a look at us here, now, and then say whether we are hooligans,” said Ina Wong, a 34-year-old designer, referring to China’s hard-line leader. Ms. Wong took part in the rally along with her husband, a civil servant, and their 2-year-old son.

But the mood turned grimmer as darkness fell and the Kowloon Peninsula, across Victoria Harbor, became the focus for a new round of protests, which, unlike the morning rally in Central, had not been authorized by the police.

Image
CreditLam Yik Fei for The New York Times

The number of protesters was far below the huge demonstrations last month, and Saturday evening’s events in Kowloon were driven largely by groups of a few hundred activists who roamed from area to area in an effort to avoid arrest for participation in an unauthorized gathering. After one group blocked a tunnel under the harbor from Kowloon to Central in the early evening, a different group occupied the entrance to the Lion Rock Tunnel, under a mountain in Kowloon.

The blocking of roads and tunnels recalled some of the disarray that convulsed Hong Kong on Monday, when a wave of protest rallies and strikes bought much of the city to a standstill, with the police and demonstrators clashing in several areas. Monday’s unrest prompted a barrage of warnings from the Communist Party in Beijing and its allies in Hong Kong that further unrest would not be tolerated.

On Saturday, party-controlled newspapers in Hong Kong published what they said was an open letter signed by more than 700 patriotic residents voicing support for the city’s police, whom protesters have accused of brutality, and demanding that the local government “swiftly stop this chaotic situation.”

Image
CreditAnthony Wallace/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

The letter, and a series of small counterprotests in support of the government, followed a demand this past week from Beijing’s top official responsible for Hong Kong that China’s supporters there speak out against the protest movement and mobilize to resist any concessions to its demands.

Those demands include the resignation of Hong Kong’s chief executive, Carrie Lam, as well as an independent inquiry into the police’s conduct and the full withdrawal of the extradition bill that sparked the protests.

China’s characterization of the Hong Kong protests as “turmoil” — the word it used to describe protests in Tiananmen Square in Beijing in 1989 — has fueled rumors that another crackdown was being planned. But few expect China to send in the People’s Liberation Army, as it did to crush the student-led Tiananmen movement 30 years ago.

Watched by a lone Chinese soldier with an assault rifle guarding the gate to China’s military compound in Central, the morning protesters marched without incident past the garrison, shouting, “Go Hong Kong! Go Hong Kong! Fathers and mothers please preserve our future!”

They ended their parade outside the offices of Hong Kong’s Legislative Council, a body that helped to spur the protest movement by moving in June to adopt legislation that would allow extradition to mainland China. Mrs. Lam, the chief executive, has since suspended the bill, but she has resisted demands that it be formally withdrawn.

Many in Hong Kong are not willing to accept Mrs. Lam’s assurances that the bill is “dead.”

“People don’t trust the government. This is the main problem,” said Ken Lin, an unemployed 39-year-old office worker who helped organize the Saturday march. “The government only obeys Beijing, not what the people of Hong Kong want.”

Image
CreditJerome Favre/EPA, via Shutterstock

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https://www.nytimes.com/2019/08/10/world/asia/hong-kong-protests.html

2019-08-10 14:41:52Z
52780348336869

Hong Kong Protesters Defy Beijing Warnings, as Police Fire Tear Gas - The New York Times

HONG KONG — Defying warnings from China of a crackdown if they continued more than two months of protests, young demonstrators blocked a vital tunnel under Hong Kong’s Victoria Harbor on Saturday, barricaded a traffic intersection and set fires outside a police station in a shopping district popular with tourists.

The Hong Kong police force said in a statement that the fires in the Tsim Sha Tsui district of the city posed “a serious threat to the safety of everyone at the scene.”

Police officers fired tear gas in several locations as a day that began with a show of peaceful defiance outside the headquarters of China’s military garrison descended into an evening of clashes, panic and widespread disruption.

Thousands of activists continued a sit-in at Hong Kong’s international airport, one of the world’s busiest air-travel hubs, on the second day of what they said would be a three-day occupation. The airport demonstration, unlike scattered and often-chaotic protests on the Kowloon Peninsula on Saturday evening, has so far been peaceful.

Stores along Nathan Road, normally crowded with evening shoppers and tourists, closed their doors as the police moved into the area, charging into passers-by caught up in a melee that was shrouded in clouds of tear gas.

Amy Havart, a 32-year-old Hong Kong resident, said she had been leaving a hotel on Nathan Road after drinks with friends when hotel staff members “told us that the police are dropping tear gas outside; we don’t know what is happening at all.”

She said she could not see any protesters or acts of violence so could not understand why there were so many police officers.

“We are all just here trying to have some fun tonight. So why are the police here?” she asked. “I don’t know what is happening to this city. This is just heartbreaking to see.”

[What’s going on in Hong Kong? Here’s how the protests have evolved.]

Assailed for days by China’s propaganda machine as violent thugs who must be stopped, Hong Kong’s protest movement — a largely leaderless jumble of groups and causes — started the day with a display of what activists say was their peaceful intent. Several thousand people marched in an orderly procession past China’s military headquarters in the former British colony.

That protest march in Central District, billed by organizers as a “family friendly” event, featured parents, baby strollers and children with balloons, and avoided incendiary slogans about “retaking Hong Kong” that have angered China’s governing Communist Party.

Image
CreditLam Yik Fei for The New York Times

“Xi Jinping should come and take a look at us here, now, and then say whether we are hooligans,” said Ina Wong, a 34-year-old designer, referring to China’s hard-line leader. Ms. Wong took part in the rally along with her husband, a civil servant, and their 2-year-old son.

But the mood turned grimmer as darkness fell and the Kowloon Peninsula, across Victoria Harbor, became the focus for a new round of protests, which, unlike the morning rally in Central, had not been authorized by the police.

The number of protesters was far below the huge demonstrations last month, and Saturday evening’s events in Kowloon were driven largely by groups of a few hundred activists who roamed from area to area in an effort to avoid arrest for participation in an unauthorized gathering. After one group blocked a tunnel under the harbor from Kowloon to Central in the early evening, a different group occupied the entrance to the Lion Rock Tunnel, under a mountain in Kowloon.

The blocking of roads and tunnels recalled some of the disarray that convulsed Hong Kong on Monday, when a wave of protest rallies and strikes bought much of the city to a standstill, with the police and demonstrators clashing in several areas. Monday’s unrest prompted a barrage of warnings from the Communist Party in Beijing and its allies in Hong Kong that further unrest would not be tolerated.

On Saturday, party-controlled newspapers in Hong Kong published what they said was an open letter signed by more than 700 patriotic residents voicing support for the city’s police, whom protesters have accused of brutality, and demanding that the local government “swiftly stop this chaotic situation.”

The letter, and a series of small counterprotests in support of the government, followed a demand this past week from Beijing’s top official responsible for Hong Kong that China’s supporters there speak out against the protest movement and mobilize to resist any concessions to its demands.

Those demands include the resignation of Hong Kong’s chief executive, Carrie Lam, as well as an independent inquiry into the police’s conduct and the full withdrawal of the extradition bill that sparked the protests.

China’s characterization of the Hong Kong protests as “turmoil” — the word it used to describe protests in Tiananmen Square in Beijing in 1989 — has fueled rumors that another crackdown was being planned. But few expect China to send in the People’s Liberation Army, as it did to crush the student-led Tiananmen movement 30 years ago.

Watched by a lone Chinese soldier with an assault rifle guarding the gate to China’s military compound in Central, the morning protesters marched without incident past the garrison, shouting, “Go Hong Kong! Go Hong Kong! Fathers and mothers please preserve our future!”

They ended their parade outside the offices of Hong Kong’s Legislative Council, a body that helped to spur the protest movement by moving in June to adopt legislation that would allow extradition to mainland China. Mrs. Lam, the chief executive, has since suspended the bill, but she has resisted demands that it be formally withdrawn.

Many in Hong Kong are not willing to accept Mrs. Lam’s assurances that the bill is “dead.”

“People don’t trust the government. This is the main problem,” said Ken Lin, an unemployed 39-year-old office worker who helped organize the Saturday march. “The government only obeys Beijing, not what the people of Hong Kong want.”

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https://www.nytimes.com/2019/08/10/world/asia/hong-kong-protests.html

2019-08-10 14:37:30Z
52780348336869

Trump says he received 'small apology' from Kim Jong Un for missile tests - Fox News

President Trump said Saturday that he had received a “small apology” from North Korean leader Kim Jong Un for testing short-range missiles -- while appearing to side with him on what he called “ridiculous and expensive” joint exercises conducted by the U.S. and South Korea.

"In a letter to me sent by Kim Jong Un, he stated, very nicely, that he would like to meet and start negotiations as soon as the joint U.S./South Korea joint exercise are over,” Trump tweeted. “It was a long letter, much of it complaining about the ridiculous and expensive exercises.”

NORTH KOREA AGAIN FIRES PROJECTILES INTO SEA OF JAPAN, OFFICIALS SAY

He went on to say that he is looking forward to meeting with him soon.

“It was also a small apology for testing the short range missiles, and that this testing would stop when the exercises end. I look forward to seeing Kim Jong Un in the not too distant future!” he said. “A nuclear free North Korea will lead to one of the most successful countries in the world!”

Trump’s tweet comes as the isolated country continued, as Trump indicated, to continue to test short-range missiles on Saturday. South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said the missiles were fired from the North’s east coast and landed in waters between the Korean Peninsula and Japan.

Pyongyang has claimed that the U.S.-South Korea exercises force it to "develop, test and deploy the powerful physical means essential for national defense."

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Trump has made unprecedented efforts to resolve the crisis in the Peninsula, shifting dramatically from warnings of “fire and fury” for North Korea if it continued to defy the international community in 2017 to two friendly summits in 2018 and 2019. He said on Friday that he received a "beautiful" three-page letter from Kim and predicted more talks.

However, this year talks have stalled on the question of Pyongyang’s denuclearization. Seoul and Washington have scaled down exercises since the first talks in 2018, but North Korea has continued to insist that even those violate agreements between Trump and Kim.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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https://www.foxnews.com/politics/trump-apology-kim-jong-un-missile-tests

2019-08-10 13:57:32Z
52780347191181

Five killed in Russian 'liquid jet propultion - CNN

The five were killed "while testing a liquid jet propulsion system," Rosatom, which oversees all Russian nuclear projects, said in a statement on its website.
It added three more people were injured and "have burns of varying severity."
The incident happened Thursday near Severodvinsk, a town in the Arkhangelsk region which is home to a naval base and a shipyard.
The Russian Defense Ministry said at the time that two people died while testing the liquid jet propulsion system and that no dangerous substances were released into the atmosphere.
Explosions and evacuations after fire at military warehouse in Siberia
"The tragedy occurred during works related to the engineering and technical support of isotopic sources in a liquid propulsion system," the ministry said in a statement.
However, local authorities in Severodvinsk released a statement Thursday that said there was a radiation spike following the blast. That statement has since been deleted from the official website.
A spokesperson for the Severodvinsk administration told RBC, a Russian daily business newspaper, that the statement had been removed from the website "as the situation is being handled by the Ministry of Defense."
The local authorities said sensors in Severodvinsk "recorded a short-term increase in the radiation background" at 11:50 a.m. local time (4:50 a.m. ET) on Thursday.
The statement went on to say the radiation level decreased between 11:50 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. local time. It added that by 2 p.m. the radiation levels in Severodvinsk had returned to normal.
The blast near Severodvinsk is one of the three incidents which took place in Russia this week as two explosions rocked an ammunition storage facility in the Krasnoyarsk region injuring dozens.

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https://www.cnn.com/2019/08/10/europe/russia-jet-propulsion-blast-radiation-intl/index.html

2019-08-10 09:49:00Z
52780349455841

Hong Kong protesters turn airport into art workshop - Aljazeera.com

Hong Kong, China - Using an x-acto knife, Winnie Wat cuts strips of masking tape and sticks them onto the terminal floor of Hong Kong's international airport, where hundreds of pro-democracy protesters are holding a three-day sit-in.

Referring to a design on her phone case, the secondary school teacher fixes tape in horizontal lines to create a Hong Kong ambigram, a word that can be read differently depending on its orientation. In Chinese, "Hong" one way reads "peace" the other way.

"We are all witnesses," said Wat, who is in her 30s. All around her, other black-clad protesters are cutting stickers, assembling posters, painting illustrations and creating graphic designs on their computers.

"Everyone is doing what they can do. There is no one [in control]," she said. When it comes to promotional materials for the anti-government protests, creation and contribution are completely egalitarian.

On Friday, Hong Kong's international airport could have been mistaken for a studio. Many of the dozens of black-clad protesters participating in the sit-in used the terminal floor to design and disseminate art informing travellers of the civil unrest that has roiled the Chinese territory for the past 10 weeks.

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Anti-government protests have rocked the Asian financial hub over a now-shelved bill that would allow China to extradite accused individuals to face trial on the mainland.

The public furore over the legislation transformed into a wider backlash against increasing Chinese interference in the semi-autonomous region.

At risk are the city's cherished civil liberties, enshrined by the "One Country, Two Systems" framework established when the British returned the city to Chinese rule in 1997.

Largely leaderless

There is no one central authority or figure that governs the direction of the protests. Organised largely via social media apps, the anti-government movement is largely leaderless.

The same goes for its promotional materials. From creation to dissemination, design production is just as leaderless as the movement itself: anonymous, voluntary, and netizen-driven.

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"The protests here, we don't have any leaders. Everyone is the leader," said Xavier Li, a 23-year-old recent graduate. "Because we are seeking democracy. That's why we're respecting everyone's opinions.

The government and police have too much authority and power ... I don't think we can do anything to successfully change their mindset. But if everyone one of us contributes a little bit of their ability, then ... it can be a huge power."

Not everyone can or wants to be on the front line of the protests, where police regularly clash with protesters and fire tear gas and rubber bullets to disperse crowds.

Instead, artistically inclined protesters see their role as keeping the public informed in Hong Kong and beyond.

Some translate leaflets into multiple languages for an international audience - mostly English and Chinese, but some Korean and Japanese too. Some create graphic images of the protests.

At the airport, a protester held up his computer to display an explainer video using assembled violent footage. Others held up signs with QR codes that link to more informative videos and sites.

"We are just doing what we can do to tell people what's going on in Hong Kong," said Wat.

Anyone can contribute and share protest artwork on social media - mainly Telegram, Airdrop, Instagram, and LIHKG - which is essential for dissemination.

Hong Kong protests

Protesters form a mobile Lennon Wall during a demonstration at Hong Kong airport on Friday [Vincent Thian/AP]

'Ask me about Hong Kong'

Public anger has swelled in recent weeks over both the escalating use of force by the police against protesters - with 1,000 rounds of tear gas and 160 rubber bullets fired - and a mob attack that left 45 people injured.

Police announced last week that at least 400 people have been arrested in connection with the unrest since June 9.

Ahead of the airport protest, the US Department of State issued a travel advisory on Wednesday, warning visitors to "exercise increased caution" due to political demonstrations that sometimes turn "confrontational" or result in "violent clashes."

Several other countries have issued similar travel warnings, including Australia, the UK, Ireland, Japan, and Singapore.

On Thursday, police called on airport protesters to remain "peaceful and law-abiding".

Airport operations went on largely uninterrupted during the kick-off on Friday. The check-in hall was restricted to those with valid boarding passes and travellers were advised to allow extra travel time.

Travellers exiting into the arrivals hall were greeted by hundreds of protesters brandishing colourful posters and chanting: "Free Hong Kong!"

Dozens distributed pamphlets telling passengers to "Ask me about Hong Kong!" Some stood, forming human Lennon Walls covered in sticky notes.

"We Hongkongers have different roles in this revolution," said Sheryl, a 22-year-old student, explaining a yellow "Dear Travellers" pamphlet discussing the extradition bill crisis.

"Press and journalists, those people in the front line. Students, protectors. We are promoters," she said.

Promoters print whatever materials they're drawn to. Since the protests began in June, Sheryl has printed about $400 worth of promo materials.

"We don't even know who designs," she added. "We simply download on the internet. [Artists] never put their name on it."

Travellers arriving in Hong Kong on Friday had mixed reaction to the protest.

"Normal persons who live here every day live in [danger], live in this chaos. It's so bad," said Haku Bai, 27, an assistant football coach from Beijing travelling from Croatia.

"I don't actually care [about] government things. I don't care about who wants something. I only care about... my life and people's lives."

Giles Isbell, 51, a history teacher from Britain, said he was "pleasantly surprised by how pleasant and welcoming and informative" the protesters were.

Friday marked the first day of his move to Hong Kong with his family. He's not "unduly worried" about the unrest, but knows "not to be in the wrong place at the wrong time."

"I like Hong Kong and China, but [they're] not the same," said Eri Tabei, who's from Osaka, Japan, but lives and works in Shanghai.

She has been following Japanese and English news about the protests, but not Chinese news due to heavy censorship.

"[The Chinese] have a bad impression due to the influence of news regulation," she said. "I support the Hong Kong people. I just want a peaceful solution."

Anti-extradition protesters react after tear gas was fired at them by police during clashes in Wong Tai Shin area in Hong Kong, China, 05 August 2019. Hong Kong is in the midst of a citywide strike fo

Protesters react after tear gas is fired at them by police during clashes in Wong Tai Shin area, Hong Kong [Miguel Candela/EPA]

This is not the first time the airport has been the site of protest grievances. On July 26, flight attendants and airport staff joined protesters for a similar airport sit-in.

Last week, an estimated 200 flights were cancelled after aviation workers joined a territory-wide general strike.

Social unrest has begun to hurt ticket sales for Hong Kong's largest airliner, Cathay Pacific Airways.

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On Thursday, the government said tourist arrivals dropped 26 percent at the end of July, compared with last year, and continue to fall in August.

While Cathay Pacific said it respects the rights of its employees to take part in demonstrations, China has banned any staff involved in protests from mainland routes starting Saturday.

Protesters have five demands, including a full withdrawal of the extradition legislation, universal suffrage, and retraction of the riot label pinned to recent protests. The government has refused to concede to any.

While thousands are expected to flood the streets this weekend for more protests, the airport will remain occupied through Sunday. Many will take breaks, going home to sleep, eat, and shower.

Before leaving the airport, Winnie will remove her tape art from the floor. "Nothing gets left behind," she said, adding that she'll be back again on Saturday.

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https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/08/hong-kong-protesters-turn-airport-art-workshop-190810050705310.html

2019-08-10 06:53:00Z
52780348336869

Jumat, 09 Agustus 2019

Hong Kong: China bans Cathay Pacific staff seen to support protests - BBC News

China has ordered the Hong Kong-based airline Cathay Pacific to suspend any staff who support pro-democracy protests in the territory.

Beijing's demand coincided with a peaceful rally at Hong Kong's airport, where thousands occupied a terminal.

Cathay also faced pressure online after China's state-run press fuelled a #BoycottCathayPacific hashtag, which trended on Chinese social media.

Hong Kong has seen weeks of protests over China's control of the territory.

The protests began about nine weeks ago over a proposed extradition bill between Hong Kong and mainland China and evolved into demands for greater freedoms.

Hong Kong is part of China but its citizens have more autonomy than those on the mainland. It has a free press and judicial independence under the so-called "one country, two systems" approach - freedoms activists fear are being increasingly eroded.

China fuels boycott campaigns

Earlier this week China warned the pro-democracy protesters in Hong Kong not to "underestimate the firm resolve of the central government".

This week China appeared to turn its attention to companies it sees as connected to the protests. Cathay was targeted after one of its pilots was arrested among protesters, and the airline's flight attendants union signed a joint statement with other aviation industry employees backing the protesters.

"The four sins of Cathay Pacific Airlines," read a headline in Chinese state newspaper the People's Daily, which detailed actions by the carrier it said were supportive of the pro-democracy movement.

Media playback is unsupported on your device

Cathay chairman John Slosar defended his staff. "We employ 27,000 staff in Hong Kong doing all sorts of different jobs... we certainly wouldn't dream of telling them what they have to think about something," he said.

A Taiwanese bubble tea franchise - Yifang - and a popular Japanese sports drink were also targeted by boycott campaigns. One of Yifang's branches in Hong Kong had reportedly hung a sign cheering on the protesters. The branch was later vandalised, Taiwanese broadcaster TVBS reported.

Japanese sports drink Pocari Sweat pulled advertising from Hong Kong television station TVB, which protesters accuse of pro-Beijing coverage.

Under pressure of a boycott, the firm's mainland China office issued a statement saying it operated separately from the Hong Kong division and upheld China's "one country, two systems" rule.

What happened at the airport?

The boycotts came as protesters gathered at Hong Kong airport for three days of peaceful demonstrations.

Activists waved banners written in different languages denouncing Carrie Lam, Hong Kong's chief executive, and the police, and handed out leaflets with artwork explaining the recent protests.

Authorities are so far tolerating the rally, which have not overly disrupted passengers. There are as yet no police at the scene.

"It will be a peaceful protest as long as the police do not show up," one demonstrator told Reuters news agency.

Fake boarding passes saying "HK to freedom" appeared on social media to promote the rally. Hong Kong's Airport Authority said it would "operate normally" despite the planned demonstrations.

A protest at the airport on 26 July with thousands of Hong Kongers - including flight staff - took place without violence.

How have authorities reacted?

Ms Lam met business leaders on Friday to discuss the economic impact of the protests. "We've experienced Sars and financial crises," she told reporters after the meeting, referring to the respiratory disease epidemic in 2003. "This time is more serious."

Property developers in the territory had earlier warned that demonstrations were damaging Hong Kong's economy.

Ms Lam also announced the government would reconvene a week earlier than planned from recess on 13 August. But she refused to offer concessions to protesters, accusing a "small minority of people" of wanting to destroy the economy and of having "no stake in the society which so many people have helped to build".

"If you are unsatisfied with the Hong Kong government that does not mean you should condone the violence. We hope to do our work better," she said.

Earlier on Friday, authorities confirmed that former deputy police commissioner Alan Lau has been brought out of retirement to help handle protests in the territory. The commander previously oversaw Hong Kong's pro-democracy rallies in 2014.

Beijing has issued increasingly stern warnings about the continuing demonstrations, and the military recently released a video showing them conducting anti-riot drills.

The US on Friday called China a "thuggish regime" after a Chinese state newspaper published the name and photo of a US diplomat talking to Hong Kong activists.

China dismissed the remark as "gangster logic". The Chinese have repeatedly accused the US of interfering in the situation in Hong Kong.

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https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-china-49296387

2019-08-09 16:05:44Z
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