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[新闻人生] Things that could only happen in a Hong Kong protest

本帖最后由 horsegirl 于 2014-10-1 22:25 编辑

By Samanthi Dissanayake
BBC News

Tear gas, pepper spray, feelings of anger and betrayal, crowds forced to run from riot police... and yet the protests retain that uniquely Hong Kong character.
Reporters and Hong Kong residents have shared their most surreal and charming experiences on the streets.

Doing your homework

Perhaps it isn't actually anarchic but it is definitely one of the biggest protests in Hong Kong for years. And yet students - some of whom were at the vanguard of this movement - find time to sit down and do their homework. Richard Frost for Bloomberg News tweeted this picture of children doing just that.


Students doing their homework in Hong Kong's street protest


Apologising for the barricade you put up

An entrance to the Causeway Bay MTR station was barricaded and emblazoned with signs shouting out for democracy. In the middle was a small cardboard sign - also written by the protesters: "Sorry for the inconvenience."


Hong Kong resident Collier Nogues, who took the picture, said it is "characteristic of the feeling everywhere I went this afternoon. Generous, polite."


Always apologise for putting up a barricade and blocking access


Deploying ancient arts of self defence with an umbrella

The humblest and most domestic of props became a protest icon after it was transformed into a shield against pepper spray and tear gas. The picture of a sole protester wielding his umbrella against the tear gas went viral online on Monday.

And when it began to rain on Tuesday, it was put to its secondary use as protection in wet weather. Residents also tweeted that protesters were distributing raincoats in Mong Kok. Police say umbrellas were also used by some protesters to threaten officers during Sunday night's unrest.


How to deploy an umbrella in self defence
The BBC has explained how the humble umbrella became a HK protest symbol.


Concern for how fragrant fellow protesters are

Hong-Kong-based journalist Tom Grundy tweeted this picture of a protester proffering free shirt-fresheners. At times the temperature has been sweltering and amid the crowds things are bound to get a little bit sweaty.


Shirt freshener anyone?

And while on the streets with the protesters, the BBC's Martin Yip witnessed volunteer armies spraying people with water to keep them cool and fresh.


Keeping off the well cut grass lawn when asked by a cardboard sign

A picture on the live page of the South China Morning Post showed a sea of protesters who it noted had parted for the grass courtyard where Hong Kong's cenotaph is located. Protesters still obeyed signs telling them to keep off the grass at the monument, putting the "civil" into civil disobedience.

"Despite the crowds around the war memorial in Central, not one person is standing or sitting on the grass. There's a new cardboard sign over the usual sign telling people not to go on the grass," the Hong Kong-based paper wrote.


File picture of Hong Kong's war memorial outside the old legislative council building - protesters stayed off the grass


Being the tidiest protesters on the block

The BBC's Saira Asher reports on how diligently the protesters cleared up after themselves. "The morning is being spent mostly removing rubbish left over from last night's huge crowd. Students are picking up cigarette butts and plastic bottles, others are distributing breakfast buns. That is why those on the street are being called 'the politest protesters' by some on social media."



Recycling has also been organised by those on the streets. Many agree that the world hasn't seen organised and tidy protests quite like this before.

This is echoed by the South China Morning Post in its live page when it wrote of a bizarre incident in Causeway Bay where a man pelted protesters with rotten eggs, telling them to "go back to class and stop blocking the roads". Protesters reportedly responded by cleaning up the mess.

Most witnesses agree that despite the clashes on Sunday night and the sheer anger at China's decision to restrict who can run to be Hong Kong's leader, the mood on the streets is largely peaceful and generous. There have been incidents of commuters and angry local residents exhorting protesters to give up and leave - a reminder that not all of Hong Kong's residents agree with the demonstrations.

But for the moment it looks as if the Hong Kong protesters will keep on tidying up, creating lanes to enable smooth passage, doing their homework and of course making the demands they see as crucial to the future of Hong Kong.


BBC News
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-china-29423147
撒娇有糖吃,搬文有花吗?请打赏~~
我就不明白了,这是总什么心态呢,在自己的地方,不用自己的语言写口号,却要用英文写上,不是给中共看的么,呵呵
我觉得最开始的出发点是好的
但是用学生就让人唏嘘了
政治本身就是成年人的游戏,非要用民主把孩子捎上
明明没有到所谓的占领的地步,偏偏要对孩子危言耸听
现场在井然,中央不关心,
真正关心的是背后用意
政治最可怕的就是贴标签
现在你们做到了。为香港的未来担心。
当学生可以在广场做作业,从一个侧面反映他们也知道香港警察是文明的。。。香港警方甚至连他们做作业啊或者做其他事情都没有妨碍到。。。。
与其说这些抗议者是文明的,不如说是当局给了他们能够文明的舞台和勇气。。。。
然后他们还骂当局使用暴力了。。。真心觉得他们是得寸进尺。如果当局真的用了暴力,他们根本就不敢停留,更别说做作业了。
他们在有底线的人面前特别勇猛,似乎能吞下整个世界。真的明火执仗面前,一个回合都走不下来。

在街头运动中,确实女性更容易激进,如果你让小伙子们没有退路,只要把姑娘放在后面,让他们想跑的时候接受女人的鄙夷就够了。

这姑娘的看法很典型:“我不是要特别维护所谓的革命啊,占中什么的。我只是坚持去可望一个民主的政治而不是专制的政治……”

第一句话暴露了她对这场运动其实并不了解。也不奇怪,一来是墙造成了很多隔阂,没有公开交锋,二来是大多数人确实也没准备在政治问题上花力气,只是找到一个值得追随的人,然后跟着他走就是了。

有人确实非常羡慕皿煮,说有北欧国家福利好,你生孩子给你发一个婴儿车,羡慕的基本都还没生育,不知道婴儿车有平躺的推车和轻便的伞车,应付冬天夏天防风防晒等不同的功能,一个国家把车塞给你,你连上面是米奇还是喜羊羊都没法挑,这绝对不是一个正常国家。哈耶克老师说同一个人的幸福依赖于种种事物,它是无数种组合。

大多数仅仅是渴望移民北欧的人其实最挑剔了,外包装不平整都要找淘宝卖家退五块钱的。
签名被屏蔽
我就说一句,当初说是民主的乌克兰,现在一般的国土都不在政府的掌控之下了。
呃,给翻译个?

人生如梦,一尊还酹江月。
还有张照片,一群人在淡定的烧烤……
本帖最后由 alicelan 于 2014-10-2 18:22 编辑

其实这个和飞机绑架犯是一个性质,绑架犯绑架一飞机的人,威胁政府放首领啥的;占中绑架整个香港中环经济秩序来喊口号。这些孩子年龄也不大,我就疑惑了,即使普选既没成年又没工作,你觉得选票会给你吗?你们兴奋个啥?以为一起出去郊游跑马拉松吗?
连地铁口都给堵住了,市民纳税就应该享有公共交通便利,强行堵住通道之类的就是扰乱公共秩序;这是披着学生运动的面皮,抱着法不责众的心理,一撮人暗搓搓的煽动脑热的学生达到自己的目的。
回复 1# horsegirl


  这几天看cnn、bbc之流对香港动态很起劲,不厌其烦地和25年前的北京相比较,拼命猜测北京什么时候动武,带着嗜血的兴奋。

得到这种等着拿香港学生的血蘸人血馒头的媒体的表扬,很值得自豪啊。

其实英国这样的老牌帝国,从殖民时代就很擅长把殖民地人民分裂成几个群组,让他们流血互斗,以便取利。像巴基斯坦、印度,还有耶路撒冷等地,至今遗祸。
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