Welcome to Hong Kong City Run By Police & Gangsters

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Welcome to Hong Kong City Run By Police & Gangsters

Postby seemslikeadream » Fri Jul 26, 2019 8:42 am

Antony Dapiran

Slogans being chanted by the crowd include “I want genuine universal suffrage” 我要真普選


Impossible to capture the scale of the protests at @hkairport right now as they fill the entirety of the vast arrivals hall.

Not your usual tourist’s airport welcome...
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https://twitter.com/antd/status/1154681505886531584


Who are the men in white behind Hong Kong’s mob attack?
viewtopic.php?f=52&t=41753




Beijing strikes ominous tone, saying military could intervene in Hong Kong
The latest protests in Hong Kong appear to have touched a nerve in Beijing, where officials and state media have escalated rhetoric against the pro-democracy movement, accusing the United States of interference and ominously affirming the People’s Liberation Army’s ability to intervene at the Hong Kong government’s request.

Chinese Defense Ministry spokesman Wu Qian said at a news conference Wednesday morning that the protests on Sunday were “intolerable.”

“Some radical protesters’ actions challenge the authority of the central government and the bottom line of ‘One Country, Two Systems,’” Wu said, adding that the ministry would follow Article 14 of Hong Kong’s Basic Law.

“One Country, Two Systems” is China’s way of referring to its administration of Hong Kong, under which it is part of China but allowed to maintain some degree of autonomy. Article 14 states that the Chinese government’s military forces stationed in Hong Kong will not interfere in local affairs unless the Hong Kong government requests assistance “in the maintenance of public order” or for disaster relief.

As mass protests against a proposed extradition bill morphed into a desperate pro-democracy movement in Hong Kong over the last two months, the local government has denied rumors that the Chinese military might intervene. Some analysts who study Hong Kong expressed skepticism that Beijing would send its military, which could have devastating consequences.

But Chinese officials and media are now stoking nationalist anger with rhetoric that’s been used to pave the way for crackdowns in the past, specifically with accusations of foreign intervention and condemnations of “chaos” and “disorder.”

Sunday’s protests broadened the scope of conflict as protesters shifted from targeting the Hong Kong territorial government and police to directly challenging the Chinese government.

Thousands marched to Beijing’s representative office in Hong Kong, chanting a pro-independence slogan. They splattered the Chinese government emblem with eggs and black ink and spray-painted the walls with derogatory terms for China.

Later that night, organized pro-Beijing thugs rampaged through a mass transit station in the northern rural area of Yuen Long, beating civilians with metal rods and wooden sticks.

Public fury has swelled against Hong Kong’s police force, which didn’t arrive until an hour after the attacks began and then disappeared before the mob returned to continue attacking people.

Lynette Ong, a University of Toronto political scientist who’s researched the employment of “thugs for hire” in mainland China, said this is a common practice and was used against protesters during the 2014 Occupy Central movement in Hong Kong.

“Governments outsource violence to third-party agents for ‘plausible deniability,’” Ong said, adding that the thugs in this case could also have been hired by business interests who want protests to end.

During a pro-Beijing rally on Saturday, Hong Kong newspaper executive Arthur Shek gave a speech encouraging crowds to “discipline” pro-democracy protesters with canes and PVC pipes. “Caning the kids is teaching them, not violence,” he said.

Shek has since resigned, after staff of his paper signed a petition condemning his remarks.

Video has emerged of pro-establishment legislator Junius Ho shaking hands with some of the men in white, as well as of police officers speaking with them, despite official claims that the police had made no arrests that night because they “could not be sure of who was involved.”

Police have since arrested 11 men in connection with the attacks on charges of unlawful assembly. They’ve also arrested more than 120 people in connection with pro-democracy protests since early June.

Protesters trashed Ho’s legislative office Monday and damaged Ho’s parents’ gravestones, spray-painting “official-triad collusion” on a wall above them.

In response, Ho posted a Facebook video making death threats against pro-democratic legislator Eddie Chu, who has spoken up against corruption in rural areas in the past and argued with Ho on a local TV channel on Tuesday.

Ho said Chu had “two paths” before him: “One is a path of being alive, one is a path of not being alive. You must choose which path to take. Decide soon,” he said.

There is no evidence of any connection between Chu and the graveyard vandalism.

While Hong Kongers raise an outcry against the Yuen Long attack, Chinese media have fixated on protesters’ defacement of the Chinese government office.

Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said at a news conference Tuesday that the vandalism was a “radical, illegal, violent action” and a “serious challenge to the bottom line of ‘One Country, Two Systems,’” adding that foreign powers were obviously directing these actions behind the scenes.

“Hong Kong is China’s Hong Kong. China will absolutely not allow any foreign power to intervene in Hong Kong affairs,” Hua said. “We urge America to withdraw their black hands from Hong Kong before it is too late.”

There has been no evidence of U.S. involvement in the Hong Kong protests, although the U.S.-China trade war has frayed relations between Beijing and Washington.

State media and Chinese social media, which is censored so that only state-approved content appears, shared portrayals of the Hong Kong protesters as violent mobs attacking police and threatening Chinese sovereignty while a “silent majority” of pro-Beijing Hong Kongers cried for help to protect Hong Kong from violence.

State media have said nothing about the Yuen Long mob so far, but social media posts supporting the attackers have been allowed to proliferate.

“If someone wanted to invade your homeland, wouldn’t you resist them rather than welcoming them?” wrote one commenter in defense of the white-shirted attackers. “These rioters came to Yuen Long to create riots first, then the locals in white shirts resisted them.”

It’s a turnaround from earlier media strategy in mainland China, where the peaceful million-person marches in Hong Kong in June were censored.

Only when protesters broke into the legislative building on July 1 did Chinese media begin reporting on the Hong Kong protesters, framed as troublemaking rioters under foreign influence.

“It is like what they tried to do when broadcasting images of upheavals in Western countries to portray an impression of chaotic democracy,” said Ho-fung Hung, sociology professor at Johns Hopkins University. “But such efforts could easily backfire.”

“The mobilization of thugs could further delegitimize the government and make the protest boil over further. The showing of protest footage could also encourage mainland citizens to imitate,” Ho said.

Jeff Wasserstrom, a historian at UC Irvine, said the state narrative’s portrayal of Hong Kong protesters resembles how Chinese Communist Party leadership spoke about student protesters in Tiananmen Square in the lead-up to the massacre in 1989.

“The CCP leadership promulgated the notion 30 years ago that what were, in fact, overwhelmingly nonviolent and broadly supported gatherings in Tiananmen and public squares in scores of other cities were somehow creating ‘chaos,’” Wasserstrom said.

The echoes come alongside state praise for Li Peng, the recently deceased hard-line former premier who backed a military response to the Tiananmen protests.

An official obituary said Li “made decisive moves to stop the turmoil” in 1989, playing “an important role in the major struggle concerning the future and fate of the Party and the state.”

At the same time, Chinese leader Xi Jinping seems so far determined to avoid a repeat of Tiananmen.

Willy Lam, professor in Chinese politics at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, said that Xi is hesitant to deploy troops because it would mean an end to the “One Country, Two Systems” setup, which is supposed to guarantee Hong Kong semi-autonomy until 2047.

Chinese troops in Hong Kong’s streets might also drive out the thousands of multinational businesses headquartered in Hong Kong, he said, which would be a major loss for Beijing.

Beijing seems to be using the same strategy as in 2014, Lam said: “Do nothing, make no concessions and wait for the protesters to make mistakes.”

But the current movement has far broader social support than the Occupy movement did in 2014, which means the protests may escalate rather than fade away.

The march planned for Saturday in Yuen Long may be “explosive,” Lam said.

One idea that’s gaining traction is for the government to establish an independent judiciary-led inquiry into both police and protester violence over the last two months.

Dozens of ex-Hong Kong officials and legislators, the Hong Kong Bar Assn., the Hong Kong General Chamber of Commerce and more than 60 family members of police officers have voiced support for such a commission.

Setting up such an inquiry would be “painful” for Beijing, Lam said, but might be the “least costly maneuver” given the alternatives of “losing face” by withdrawing the bill, especially now that domestic anger is ramped up, or escalating into military intervention.

Global attention plays a crucial role in what happens next in Hong Kong, Wasserstrom said.

“This is a pivotal moment in one of the great David and Goliath struggles of contemporary times. It has been extraordinary how often the David in this case has been able to stand up to the Goliath,” Wasserstrom said.

“That does not mean it can necessarily keep happening and that the Goliath in Beijing will not change its strategy.”

Nicole Liu and Gaochao Zhang in the Times’ Beijing bureau contributed to this report.
https://www.latimes.com/world-nation/st ... -hong-kong
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Re: Welcome to Hong Kong City Run By Police & Gangsters

Postby seemslikeadream » Sat Jul 27, 2019 9:33 pm

Police In Hong Kong Fire Tear Gas As Demonstrators Rally In Response To Attack
Sasha Ingber
July 27, 20192:48 PM ET
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A protester helps a fellow demonstrator after police fired tear gas in the district of Yuen Long in Hong Kong on Saturday. Demonstrators defied a police ban to rally.
Anthony Wallace/AFP/Getty Images
Protesters in Hong Kong defied orders to not demonstrate on Saturday, gathering to denounce the police and government in an area where pro-democracy activists were attacked last weekend.

Protesters swarmed a major road in the district of Yuen Long clutching umbrellas to shield themselves from police cameras and tear gas that was later used against them at various sites along the route of their march.

The rally stemmed from an attack last Sunday at a train station in Yuen Long that left dozens of locals and pro-democracy activists wounded. The masked assailants, who wore white shirts and carried clubs, are suspected of having ties to organized crime groups known as triads.

On Saturday, the standoffs between police and protesters resulted in blocked roads and canisters of tear gas being fired. Police officers tried to disperse crowds on Castle Peak Road, Hong Kong's longest road, and outside of a village where protesters had marched toward a police line.

Roy Kwong, a leading pro-democracy lawmaker, accused the police of firing tear gas near a home for the elderly, according to Hong Kong Free Press.


RTHK English News
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#HongKong police fire volley after volley of tear gas at protesters in multiple areas of #YuenLong
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The demonstrations appear to have started peacefully, as one prominent protester, the singer Denise Ho, autographed hard hats for smiling demonstrators. A protester strung an anti-police banner outside of the Yuen Long police station and "a very friendly policeman came out of the watch tower to tell him to be careful not to fall," said Hong Kong-based writer and lawyer Antony Dapiran.

At the Yuen Long train station, funeral bouquets were placed on the ground for Carrie Lam, Hong Kong's chief executive whom critics call "Beijing's puppet," and Stephen Lo, the police commissioner. Chants of "Reclaim HK! Revolution of our time!" could be heard as people moved through the station.

As the day wore on, the Hong Kong government warned people to leave Yuen Long, saying that some protesters were hurling bricks, carrying iron poles and blocking roads with fences.

The Hong Kong Police Force said that officers would disperse demonstrators from Yuen Long, but that protesters remained at the train station. They said a maximum penalty of five years in prison could be imposed on protesters.

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Faceoffs between protesters and police broke out during a demonstration in the district of Yuen Long in Hong Kong on Saturday.
Anthony Wallace/AFP/Getty Images
Washington Post reporter Shibani Mahtani told NPR that both protesters and police appeared to be digging in, with people "basically pulling up bricks from the sidewalk" and arming themselves with iron rods and makeshift shields from wood found nearby.

Mahtani said that children and elderly people participated in the rally, but that protesters were predominantly young and appeared ready to "suit up" and "start essentially building weapons."

One of the protest organizer's, Max Chung, told Radio Television Hong Kong that he was "not concerned about my safety, but of course, I am concerned about everyone else's safety."

Protesters reportedly circumvented the police's orders not to assemble, using social media channels to organize under the pretext of a "full-gear shopping day" and playing Pokémon Go in the area.

The police also banned a protest scheduled to take place Sunday in Sheung Wan, a lively neighborhood known for shopping and traditional Chinese medicine shops. Police said they denied the authorization because of public safety and order concerns, according to the Hong Kong Free Press.

On Friday, as part of a summer racked by protests, thousands of people filled the arrivals terminal of the bustling Hong Kong International Airport, demanding change.

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A crowd of protesters blocks a police van during a demonstration on Saturday.
Anthony Wallace/AFP/Getty Images
The original protests started in response to a bill that would have allowed extraditions to mainland China, prompting fears that vocal Hong Kong activists would face prosecution in courts controlled by Beijing's Communist Party. Hong Kong's embattled chief executive has since declared the bill "dead," but she has refused to formally withdraw the measure.

After weeks of protests, the demands of demonstrators have expanded. They have called for an independent inquiry into the police's use of force at rallies and condemned the authorities for what they decry as a sluggish response to Sunday's attack at the train station. Protesters have also pushed for the right to directly elect their leaders, who must now be approved by Beijing.

Lo, the police commissioner, told reporters that officers were slow to respond to last weekend's attack because nearby stations were closed during the protest and police needed to "redeploy manpower from other districts." He vowed to bring the offenders to justice and denied accusations that the police had worked with triads to target anti-government protesters, according to Reuters.

The recent unrest has also prompted a new contingent of protesters — those who are coming out to support the police and Beijing.

In China, one of the country's most popular television shows denounced the protest on Saturday and blamed "external forces" for causing chaos, according to the South China Morning Post. Beijing also reportedly blocked mainlanders' access to international news sites, denying them a chance to hear the voices of people fighting for democracy in Hong Kong.

Once a British colony, Hong Kong was returned to China in 1997 under a "one country, two systems" framework. Under Hong Kong's Basic Law, the city is guaranteed "a high degree of autonomy" for 50 years. But fears of encroachment on democratic institutions have grown.

"Protesters aren't even thinking that far," Mahtani says. "They're thinking about tomorrow; they're thinking about next week."

This week, China's Defense Ministry spokesman, Wu Qian, told reporters that the Chinese military could be deployed to Hong Kong to maintain public order if Hong Kong asks the central government for help.

A government spokesperson for Hong Kong said authorities would not turn to the Chinese army for assistance because they were fully able to maintain order and deal with local affairs.
https://www.npr.org/2019/07/27/74584734 ... -to-attack
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Re: Welcome to Hong Kong City Run By Police & Gangsters

Postby seemslikeadream » Sun Jul 28, 2019 9:16 am

Stephen McDonell

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#HongKong Causeway Bay shopping district right now occupied by pro-democracy activists as part of an unauthorized march. #China

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Re: Welcome to Hong Kong City Run By Police & Gangsters

Postby seemslikeadream » Mon Aug 12, 2019 9:18 am

All flights out of Hong Kong Airport cancelled as protesters put up an extraordinary show of determination. Ten weeks and counting


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Hong Kong airport, one of the world’s busiest international hubs, is at a standstill right now as thousands of protesters, many dressed in black, stage a sit-in. After 10 weeks of demonstrations, fears of Chinese military response are mounting.
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https://twitter.com/annafifield/status/ ... 9002839040
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Re: Welcome to Hong Kong City Run By Police & Gangsters

Postby seemslikeadream » Tue Aug 13, 2019 8:54 am

The People’s Armed Police have been assembling in Shenzhen, a city bordering Hong Kong, in advance of apparent large-scale exercises, videos obtained by the Global Times have shown.

Videos show People's Armed Police assembling in Shenzhen apparently for exercises

The People's Armed Police have been assembling in Shenzhen, a city bordering Hong Kong, in advance of apparent large-scale exercises, videos obtained by the Global Times have shown.

Numerous armored personnel carriers (APC), trucks and other vehicles of the Armed Police were seen on expressways heading in the direction of Shenzhen over the weekend and assembling there, the videos indicate.

In one video, which is only about 10 seconds long, 10 APCs pass by.

The main guns of the APCs appear to have been removed from their turrets.

Image
A convoy of the People's Armed Police is seen heading toward Shenzhen for exercises. Photo: screenshot from videos obtained by the Global Times


The tasks and missions of the Armed Police include participating in dealing with rebellions, riots, serious violent and illegal incidents, terrorist attacks and other social security incidents, according to the Law of the People's Republic of China on the People's Armed Police.

Unlike the police which are under the Ministry of Public Security, the People's Armed Police is under the leadership of the Central Military Commission.

On August 6, Shenzhen police also conducted a massive drill featuring 12,000 police officers, armored vehicles, helicopters and amphibious vehicles.


Armored personnel carriers of the People's Armed Police are seemingly gathering and heading toward Shenzhen for exercises. Photo: screenshot from videos obtained by the Global Times

http://www.globaltimes.cn/content/1161155.shtml
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Re: Welcome to Hong Kong City Run By Police & Gangsters

Postby cptmarginal » Thu Aug 15, 2019 11:51 am

Robert Fisk: If Chinese tanks take Hong Kong, it's another land grab in which we're all complicit

5 hours ago

In the glorious world of journalism, tanks always “roll” across borders. I’ve never in my life actually seen a tank roll, but you get the point. They don’t let anything stand in their way – or nothing is supposed to stand in their way.

Hence the Hong Kong Chinese should back off if the People’s Army come “rolling” across the border; the Syrian Kurds should stand aside if the Turkish army crosses their mutual border; the Muslims of Jammu and Kashmir must pay respect to the Indian army’s reinforcements; the Ukrainians or Russians hostile to Putin should not tangle with the Russian army on the Black Sea coast. Nor should the Palestinians protest when Israel’s army arrives to demolish their homes or steal more of their land.

Territorial acquisition is quite the thing these days. Whether it comes through fear of political infection – the Chinese government doesn’t want the contagion of civil chaos in Hong Kong to spread – or ethnic hatred or sectarian hatred, or nationalism, or just plain greed, we are growing dangerously accustomed to the sight of armies and paramilitary forces taking over other people’s property. Not since Saddam tried to gobble up Kuwait have we seen anything on this scale, when Iraq’s army was easily (and bloodily) sent packing.

Of course, when non-state armies try to take over the land we all collaborate to smash them, whatever the cost for innocent civilians. When Isis tried to set up a caliphate and grabbed much of Iraq and Syria – and assaulted the west – we all collaborated in bombing Fallujah, Mosul, Aleppo, Raqqa, you name it. Some truly evil empires are not allowed to get away with it, whoever gets blown to bits in the battle.

But today, you just have to claim that Hong Kong really is an integral part of China, that Crimea has always been Russian, that Jammu and Kashmir belong to Hindu-majority India and that the West Bank is in reality a place called Judea and Samaria. And hunky-dory, it’s all in the bag. Threatening to march on to other people’s property is kind of normal these days, isn’t it? And if you’re short of excuses, try “terrorism” – the biggest jargon word of the lot.

Hong Kong “terrorism”. Jammu and Kashmir (or Pakistani) “terrorism”. Ukrainian “terrorism”. Kurdish “terrorism”. And let’s not forget Palestinian “terrorism”. I wrote many times – and for the first time many years ago – that this pejorative, vicious expression would become an excuse for butchery anywhere in the world. And so today, it has come to pass. Talk about aggression, and the word “terrorism” will silence us. So the tanks can roll on.

Jigsaws are easiest when they have large pieces, and it’s not difficult to fit the bits together. The Russian state should never have given Crimea to the Ukraine, Hong Kong should never have been ceded to the British imperialists at the Treaty of Nanking – the same imperialists who divided India in 1947 after which Muslim-majority Jammu and Kashmir became an Indian state (courtesy, one must add, of Pakistan). The Kurds should never have been allowed to set up a mini-state in Syria. And as for the Palestinians – let’s forget all that nonsense about Oslo and the two-state solution – they should forget about the real Palestine and create “Palestine” in Jordan. I trust I make myself obscure.

It’s not easy, of course, to put a stop to these dreams and nightmares. Hong Kong does “belong” to China, whether we like it or not, and solemn agreements do not remain solemn for very long. If China now threatens to betray the freedoms of Hong Kong – the independent rule of law guaranteed under the 1984 autonomy agreement known as the Sino-British Joint Declaration – it can do so because, as China keeps reminding the UK government, Britain is no longer an imperial power. Besides, the UK prime minister is too busy tearing his own country apart to waste his time worrying about the freedom of long-abandoned imperial relics.

Vladimir Putin’s invasion of eastern Ukraine and the annexation of Crimea was met with sanctions by the west but with silent acceptance by the Arab nations who have so vigorously opposed the Israeli annexation of Jerusalem and Syrian Golan, and who continue to denounce the occupation of the West Bank. Putin, however, can visit Tehran as a trusted friend, be taken to a Verdi performance at the Cairo opera house by Field Marshal-President al-Sisi of Egypt, bring Erdogan of Turkey to his knees with threats of an economic boycott and pose as the saviour (which he most certainly is) of the Assad regime in Syria.

But he is also Israel’s best friend, welcomes Netanyahu to the Kremlin, and has referred to the “brilliant political career” of the racist Israeli minister Avigdor Lieberman. He tells the Israelis not to go to war with Syria – and the Israelis obey. Putin welcomes King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia. He welcomes the Qataris. He sells India the Russian S400 missile defence system and supports India’s takeover of Jammu and Kashmir on the grounds that this is “within the framework of the Indian constitution” – even though India has clearly torn up the legislative autonomy agreement with the region.

As for Israel and India, their love affair has been evident ever since the late Ariel Sharon signed an agreement with New Delhi in 2003, saying that the two countries were “strategic partners”. India was once an emotional supporter of the Palestinians. Ghandi himself has often been quoted as claiming that “Palestine belongs to the Arabs in the same sense that England belongs to the English or France to the French.” Yet now, the Indian army is itself anxious to emulate Israel’s own military tactics.

Here is US journalist Carol Schaeffer’s account of the army’s thoughts on the killing of innocents in air strikes. In November last year, speaking to a roomful of India’s most highly regarded defence strategists, General Bipin Rawat, the chief of staff of the Indian army, urged his country to shed their concerns about “collateral damage”. “When you talk of drone strikes, how does the Israeli strike the Hezbollah...” Rawat rhetorically asks, according to Schaeffer. “God help you if you’re in the following vehicle – you’re also gone.” In Israel, Rawat said, “this kind of thing is possible in that area – in that country”. In India, drones may also cost the lives of the bystanders, Rawat added. One had to “accept it”.

But with both Hindu nationalist prime minister, Narendra Modi, and Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, campaigning in their respective countries as opponents of “Muslim extremism”, there is now an ideological alliance to support Israel’s extraordinary arms sales to India.

Latest figures show that 46 per cent of all Israeli weapons sales (not including small arms) go to India at a cost to New Delhi of about $1bn every year. Major General Yaacov Barak visited Indian troops in Jammu and Kashmir in 2017. Indian air force units have trained with Israeli “special forces”. Last year, 75 Indian police officers were sent for training in Jerusalem. So when Muslim activists in Jammu and Kashmir say they have identified profound similarities between India’s tactics in the province and Israel’s behaviour in occupied Palestinian land, they are quite correct.

So does territorial aggrandizement feed on the precedence of others? Surely, the taking, seizing, the keeping and stealing of lands which belong to others creates a kind of violent legitimacy. If Recep Tayyip Erdogan can present his struggle against the Kurds as part of the world struggle against international terror – ignoring the proven connections between Turkey’s security forces and Islamist fighters in Syria – there are few (save for the poor old Kurds) who want to condemn him. What is the difference between a bomb in southeastern Turkey and a bomb in Jerusalem or attacks in Srinagar?

Whether it is Putin “recovering” the Crimea, India fully “recovering” Jammu and Kashmir, or Israel colonising Arab land in the West Bank, or even of China perhaps “restoring law and order” in Hong Kong over the next few days, there are few who stand against these acts of aggression. Why should not Turkey “defend” itself and prevent the creation of a Kurdistan, which theoretically exists both inside and outside the Turkish state?

Of course, it’s not difficult to see how our own lamentable precedents have helped to sanctify these illegal acts. After invading Iraq under totally false pretences in 2003, who are we to lecture others on the unacceptability of killing the innocent or the right of minorities to be protected? Or the illegitimacy of seizing territory through violence?

From time to time, yes, we can spot a ghostly relic of Nazi-style oppression. When Erdogan’s own education minister boasts of a mass book burning – 301,878 volumes, to be precise – in an attempt to expunge the thoughts or ideas or even the memory of “terrorist” Fethullah Gulen – our minds must surely return to other book-burnings 86 years ago. Turkish nationalists have been burning Kurdish-language books for far longer. Is ethnic or political purity what all this is about?

These are questions we should try to answer in a new age of aggression. Moral political leadership is declining, and the Trumps and Bolsonaros and the Putins and the Netanyahus and the Modis and the Erdogans and the Chinese politburo – and, yes, the Johnsons – are, in one sense, all culpable.

The lower our standards, the more we help to lower those of others. It spreads outwards, this palpable sense of ease with which we enable others to commit atrocities, war crimes and invasions. If we could bomb civilian targets in Iraq or Serbia, why should we complain when Israel bombs Gaza? If the Americans can blow a wedding party to pieces in Afghanistan, how can we condemn the Saudis when they blow a wedding party to pieces in Yemen?

So what advice should we give to the innocent when the tanks come “rolling” down their streets? Stand aside, I guess. And good luck. Because whatever else you do, don’t expect any help from us.


One motivation for me in paying attention to current events in Hong Kong is that I have been a passionate devotee of HK cinema for two decades now. I watched the Fruit Chan movies "The Longest Summer" and "Made in Hong Kong" and loved them both, and the fact of what the handover meant to HK citizens is something I have been very conscious of for a long time. These days the movie industry has basically gone to shit, too. Two or three good films a year, whereas previously there was an explosion of creativity. Stale over-reliance on special effects has become much more common. One movie that was ultimately worthwhile to watch (even if it was a bit boring) was last year's explicitly pro-Umbrella Movement "No. 1 Chung Ying Street." Now that things have gotten so out of hand, will there be stronger censorship of HK films going forward?
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Re: Welcome to Hong Kong City Run By Police & Gangsters

Postby seemslikeadream » Thu Aug 15, 2019 11:53 am

have you watched Dae Jang Geum...A Jewel in the Palace?

I really liked it
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Re: Welcome to Hong Kong City Run By Police & Gangsters

Postby cptmarginal » Thu Aug 15, 2019 11:57 am

No but I am also a huge fan of Korean cinema (ever since seeing Sympathy For Mr. Vengeance in 2002) and variety shows
The new way of thinking is precisely delineated by what it is not.
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Re: Welcome to Hong Kong City Run By Police & Gangsters

Postby seemslikeadream » Sun Aug 18, 2019 7:31 am

Image

Tens of thousands flood Hong Kong park for latest rally
Organizers said they hoped the assembly would be peaceful, which would make for a rare calm weekend.


Protesters with umbrellas brave the rain during a rally in Hong Kong Sunday, Aug. 18, 2019. People are streaming into a park in central Hong Kong for what organizers hope will be a peaceful demonstration for democracy in the semi-autonomous Chinese territory. (AP Photo/Vincent Thian)
Heavy rain fell on tens of thousands of umbrella-toting protesters Sunday as they marched from a packed park and filled a major road in Hong Kong, where mass pro-democracy demonstrations have become a regular weekend activity this summer.

Organizers said they hoped the assembly would be peaceful, which would make for a rare calm weekend in a months-long movement that has been marked by violent clashes with police.

"We hope that there will not be any chaotic situations today," said organizer Bonnie Leung. "We hope we can show the world that Hong Kong people can be totally peaceful."

Leung's group, the Civil Human Rights Front, has organized three massive marches in Hong Kong since June. The protest movement, however, has been increasingly marked by clashes with police as demonstrators vent their frustrations over what they perceive to be the government's blatant refusal to respond to their demands.

"Peace is the No. 1 priority today," said Kiki Ma, a 28-year-old accountant participating in the march. "We want to show that we aren't like the government."

While police had granted approval for the rally, they didn't approve an accompanying march. Demonstrators nevertheless fanned out and filled the streets, as there was not enough space at the designated assembly area.

Public transit trains did not stop at stations near the assembly because of overcrowding.

In Beijing, You Wenze, a spokesman for China's ceremonial legislature, condemned statements from U.S. lawmakers supportive of Hong Kong's pro-democracy movement.

You called the lawmakers' comments "a gross violation of the spirit of the rule of law, a blatant double standard and a gross interference in China's internal affairs."

Hong Kong Protests
A protester prepares to throw an egg at a pro-government lawmaker during a march in Hong Kong Saturday, Aug. 17, 2019. Another weekend of protests got underway in the Chinese territory as Mainland Chinese police are holding drills in nearby Shenzhen, prompting speculation they could be sent in to suppress the protests. (AP Photo/Vincent Thian)

AP

He said that Hong Kong's 7.5 million people and the Chinese population as a whole rejected the actions of a "very small group of violent protesters" as well as "any interference of foreign forces."

You did not mention any specific lawmaker, but numerous U.S. senators and Congress members, including House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, have affirmed the U.S. commitment to human rights and urged Hong Kong's government to end the standoff.

Congress also has the power to pass legislation affecting Hong Kong's relationship with the U.S. in ways that could further erode the territory's reputation for stability and rule of law. That includes the recent re-introduction of the Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act in Congress, which would among its other provisions require the secretary of state to issue an annual certification of Hong Kong's autonomy to justify special treatment afforded to the city.

More directly, President Donald Trump could simply issue an executive order suspending Hong Kong's special trading status with the U.S., a move that could have a devastating effect on the local economy at a time when Beijing and Washington are engaged in a bitter trade war.

A former British colony, Hong Kong was returned to Beijing in 1997 under the framework of "one country, two systems," which promised residents certain democratic rights not afforded to people in mainland China. But some Hong Kongers have accused the Communist Party-ruled central government of eroding their freedoms in recent years.

RELATED: Hong Kong's divide: 1 protest for democracy, 1 for China

RELATED: Hong Kong airport shuts down amid pro-democracy protest

The protest movement's demands include Lam's resignation, democratic elections and an independent investigation into police use of force.

Harley Ho, a 20-year-old social work student who attended Sunday's rally, said protesters were undeterred by the rain and would not rest until their demands were met.

"We will stand here, we will take action until they respond to us," she said. "In the rain, our spirit becomes stronger."

Members of China's paramilitary People's Armed Police force have been training for days across the border in Shenzhen, including on Sunday morning, fueling speculation that they could be sent in to suppress the protests. The Hong Kong police, however, have said they are capable of handling the protests.

___

Associated Press journalists Ken Moritsugu, Yves Dam Van and Phoebe Lai in Hong Kong, Dake Kang in Shenzhen, China, and Christopher Bodeen in Beijing contributed to this report.
https://www.wfaa.com/article/news/natio ... 9d273ddb29
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Re: Welcome to Hong Kong City Run By Police & Gangsters

Postby cptmarginal » Mon Aug 19, 2019 7:45 am

Standard operating procedure: exploit real grievances.

https://thegrayzone.com/2019/08/17/hong ... -violence/

Behind a made-for-TV Hong Kong protest narrative, Washington is backing nativism and mob violence

Hong Kong’s increasingly xenophobic protests are devolving into chaos with help from US government regime-change outfits and a right-wing local media tycoon with close ties to hardliners in Washington.

By Dan Cohen - 08/17/2019

President Donald Trump tweeted on August 13 that he “can’t imagine why” the United States has been blamed for the chaotic protests that have gripped Hong Kong.

Trump’s befuddlement might be understandable considering the carefully managed narrative of the US government and its unofficial media apparatus, which have portrayed the protests as an organic “pro-democracy” expression of grassroots youth. However, a look beneath the surface of this oversimplified, made-for-television script reveals that the ferociously anti-Chinese network behind the demonstrations has been cultivated with the help of millions of dollars from the US government, as well as a Washington-linked local media tycoon.

Since March, raucous protests have gripped Hong Kong. In July and August, these demonstrations transformed into ugly displays of xenophobia and mob violence.

The protests ostensibly began in opposition to a proposed amendment to the extradition law between Hong Kong, Taiwan, mainland China, and Macau, which would have allowed Taiwanese authorities to prosecute a Hong Kong man for murdering his pregnant girlfriend and dumping her body in the bushes during a vacation to Taiwan.

Highly organized networks of anti-China protesters quickly mobilized against the law, compelling Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam to withdraw the bill.

But the protests continued even after the extradition law was taken off the table — and these demonstrations degenerated into disturbing scenes. In recent days, hundreds of masked rioters have occupied the Hong Kong airport, forcing the cancellation of inbound flights while harassing travelers and viciously assaulting journalists and police.

The protesters’ stated goals remain vague. Joshua Wong, one of the most well known figures in the movement, has put forward a call for the Chinese government to “retract the proclamation that the protests were riots,” and restated the consensus demand for universal suffrage.

Wong is a bespectacled 22-year-old who has been trumpeted in Western media as a “freedom campaigner,” promoted to the English-speaking world through his own Netflix documentary, and rewarded with the backing of the US government.

But behind telegenic spokespeople like Wong are more extreme elements such as the Hong Kong National Party, whose members have appeared at protests waving the Stars and Stripes and belting out cacophonous renditions of the Star-Spangled Banner. The leadership of this officially banned party helped popularize the call for the full independence of Hong Kong, a radical goal that is music to the ears of hardliners in Washington.

Xenophobic resentment has defined the sensibility of the protesters, who vow to “retake Hong Kong” from Chinese mainlanders they depict as a horde of locusts. The demonstrators have even adopted one of the most widely recognized symbols of the alt-right, emblazoning images of Pepe the Frog on their protest literature. While it’s unclear that Hong Kong residents see Pepe the same way American white nationalists do, members of the US far-right have embraced the protest movement as their own, and even personally joined their ranks.

Among the most central influencers of the demonstrations is a local tycoon named Jimmy Lai. The self-described “head of opposition media,” Lai is widely described as the Rupert Murdoch of Asia. For the masses of protesters, Lai is a transcendent figure. They clamor for photos with him and applaud the oligarch wildly when he walks by their encampments.

Lai established his credentials by pouring millions of dollars into the 2014 Occupy Central protest, which is known popularly as the Umbrella Movement. He has since used his massive fortune to fund local anti-China political movers and shakers while injecting the protests with a virulent brand of Sinophobia through his media empire.



Though Western media has depicted the Hong Kong protesters as the voice of an entire people yearning for freedom, the island is deeply divided. This August, a group of protesters mobilized outside Jimmy Lai’s house, denouncing him as a “running dog” of Washington and accusing him of national betrayal by unleashing chaos on the island.

Days earlier, Lai was in Washington, coordinating with hardline members of Trump’s national security team, including John Bolton. His ties to Washington run deep — and so do those of the front-line protest leaders.

Millions of dollars have flowed from US regime-change outfits like the National Endowment for Democracy (NED) into civil society and political organizations that form the backbone of the anti-China mobilization. And Lai has supplemented it with his own fortune while instructing protesters on tactics through his various media organs.

With Donald Trump in the White House, Lai is convinced that his moment may be on the horizon. Trump “understands the Chinese like no president understood,” the tycoon told the Wall Street Journal. “I think he’s very good at dealing with gangsters.”

‘Stop unlimited invasion of mainland pregnant women!’

Born in the mainland in 1948 to wealthy parents, whose fortune was expropriated by the Communist Party during the revolution the following year, Jimmy Lai began working at 9 years old, carrying bags for train travelers during the hard years of the Great Chinese Famine.

Inspired by the taste of a piece of chocolate gifted to him by a wealthy man, he decided to smuggle himself to Hong Kong to discover a future of wealth and luxury. There, Lai worked his way up the ranks of the garment industry, growing enamored with the libertarian theories of economists Friedrich Hayek and Milton Friedman, the latter of whom became his close friend.

Friedman is famous for developing the neoliberal shock therapy doctrine that the US has imposed on numerous countries, resulting in the excess deaths of millions. For his part, Hayek is the godfather of the Austrian economic school that forms the foundation of libertarian political movements across the West.

Lai built his business empire on Giordano, a garment label that became one of Asia’s most recognizable brands. In 1989, he threw his weight behind the Tiananmen Square protests, hawking t-shirts on the streets of Beijing calling for Deng Xiaoping to “step down.”

Lai’s actions provoked the Chinese government to ban his company from operating on the mainland. A year later, he founded Next Weekly magazine, initiating a process that would revolutionize the mediascape in Hong Kong with a blend of smutty tabloid-style journalism, celebrity gossip and a heavy dose of anti-China spin.

The vociferously anti-communist baron soon became Hong Kong’s media kingpin, worth a whopping $660 million in 2009.

Today, Lai is the founder and majority stakeholder of Next Digital, the largest listed media company in Hong Kong, which he uses to agitate for the end of what he calls the Chinese “dictatorship.”

His flagship outlet is the popular tabloid Apple Daily, employing the trademark mix of raunchy material with a heavy dose of xenophobic, nativist propaganda.

In 2012, Apple Daily carried a full page advertisement depicting mainland Chinese citizens as invading locusts draining Hong Kong’s resources. The advertisement called for a stop to the “unlimited invasion of mainland pregnant women in Hong Kong.” (This was a crude reference to the Chinese citizens who had flocked to the island while pregnant to ensure that their children could earn Hong Kong residency, and resembled the resentment among the US right-wing of immigrant “anchor babies.”)

Image
Ad in Lai’s Apple Daily: “That’s enough! Stop unlimited invasion of mainland pregnant women!”

The transformation of Hong Kong’s economy has provided fertile soil for Lai’s brand of demagoguery. As the country’s manufacturing base moved to mainland China after the golden years of the 1980s and ‘90s, the economy was rapidly financialized, enriching oligarchs like Lai. Left with rising debt and dimming career prospects, Hong Kong’s youth became easy prey to the demagogic politics of nativism.

Many protesters have been seen waving British Union Jacks in recent weeks, expressing a yearning for an imaginary past under colonial control which they never personally experienced.

In July, protesters vandalized the Hong Kong Liaison Office, spray-painting the word, “Shina” on its facade. This term is a xenophobic slur some in Hong Kong and Taiwan use to refer to mainland China. The anti-Chinese phenomenon was visible during the 2014 Umbrella movement protests as well, with signs plastered around the city reading, “Hong Kong for Hong Kongers.”

This month, protesters turned their fury on the Hong Kong Federation of Trade Unions, spray-painting “rioters” on its office. The attack represented resentment of the left-wing group’s role in a violent 1967 uprising against the British colonial authorities, who are now seen as heroes among many of the anti-Chinese demonstrators.

Besides Lai, a large part of the credit for mobilizing latent xenophobia goes to the right-wing Hong Kong Indigenous party leader Edward Leung. Under the direction of the 28-year-old Leung, his pro-independence party has brandished British colonial flags and publicly harassed Chinese mainland tourists. In 2016, Leung was exposed for meeting with US diplomatic officials at a local restaurant.

Though he is currently in jail for leading a 2016 riot where police were bombarded with bricks and pavement – and where he admitted to attacking an officer – Leung’s rightist politics and his slogan, “Retake Hong Kong,” have helped define the ongoing protests.

A local legislator and protest leader described Leung to the New York Times as “the Che Guevara of Hong Kong’s revolution,” referring without a hint of irony to the Latin American communist revolutionary killed in a CIA-backed operation. According to the Times, Leung is “the closest thing Hong Kong’s tumultuous and leaderless protest movement has to a guiding light.”

The xenophobic sensibility of the protesters has provided fertile soil for Hong Kong National Party to recruit. Founded by the pro-independence activist Andy Chan, the officially banned party combines anti-Chinese resentment with calls for the US to intervene. Images and videos have surfaced of HKNP members waving the flags of the US and UK, singing the Star Spangled Banner, and carrying flags emblazoned with images of Pepe the Frog, the most recognizable symbol of the US alt-right.

While the party lacks a wide base of popular support, it is perhaps the most outspoken within the protest ranks, and has attracted disproportionate international attention as a result. Chan has called for Trump to escalate the trade war and accused China of carrying out a “national cleansing” against Hong Kong. “We were once colonised by the Brits, and now we are by the Chinese,” he declared.

Displays of pro-American jingoism in the streets of Hong Kong have been like catnip for the international far-right.

Patriot Prayer founder Joey Gibson recently appeared at an anti-extradition protest in Hong Kong, livestreaming the event to his tens of thousands of followers. A month earlier, Gibson was seen roughing up antifa activists alongside ranks of club wielding fascists. In Hong Kong, the alt-right organizer marveled at the crowds.

“They love our flag here more than they do in America!” Gibson exclaimed as marchers passed by, flashing him a thumbs up sign while he waved the Stars and Stripes.

‘British colonial past gave us the instinct to revolt’

Such xenophobic propaganda is consistent with the clash of civilizations theory that Jimmy Lai has promulgated through his media empire.

“You have to understand the Hong Kong people – a very tiny 7 million or 0.5 percent of the Chinese population – are very different from the rest of Chinese in China, because we grow up in the Western values, which was the legacy of the British colonial past, which gave us the instinct to revolt once this extradition law was threatening our freedom,” Lai told Fox News’ Maria Bartiromo. “Even America has to look at the world 20 years from now, whether you want the Chinese dictatorial values to dominate this world, or you want the values that you treasure [to] continue.”

During a panel discussion at the neoconservative Washington-based think tank, the Foundation For Defense of Democracies, Lai told the pro-Israel lobbyist Jonathan Schanzer, “We need to know that America is behind us. By backing us, America is also sowing to the will of their moral authority because we are the only place in China, a tiny island in China, which is sharing your values, which is fighting the same war you have with China.”

While Lai makes no attempt to conceal his political agenda, his bankrolling of central figures in the 2014 Occupy Central, or Umbrella movement protests, was not always public.

Leaked emails revealed that Lai poured more than $1.2 million to anti-China political parties including $637,000 USD to the Democratic Party and $382,000 USD to the Civic Party. Lai also gave $115,000 USD to the Hong Kong Civic Education Foundation and Hong Kong Democratic Development Network, both of which were co-founded by Reverend Chu Yiu-ming. Lai also spent $446,000 USD on Occupy Central’s 2014 unofficial referendum.

Lai’s US consigliere is a former Navy intelligence analyst who interned with the CIA and leveraged his intelligence connections to build his boss’s business empire. Named Mark Simon, the veteran spook arranged for former Republican vice-presidential candidate Sarah Palin to meet with a group in the anti-China camp during a 2009 visit to Hong Kong. Five years later, Lai paid $75,000 to neoconservative Iraq war author and US Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz to organize a meeting with top military figures in Myanmar.

This July, as the Hong Kong protests gathered steam, Lai was junketed to Washington, DC for meetings with Vice President Mike Pence, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, National Security Advisor John Bolton, and Republican Senators Ted Cruz, Cory Gardner, and Rick Scott. Bloomberg News correspondent Nicholas Wadhams remarked on Lai’s visit, “Very unusual for a [non-government] visitor to get that kind of access.”

One of Lai’s closest allies, Martin Lee, was also granted an audience with Pompeo, and has held court with US leaders including Nancy Pelosi and former Vice President Joseph Biden.

Among the most prominent figures in Hong Kong’s pro-US political parties, Lee began collaborating with Lai during the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests. A recipient of the US government-funded National Endowment for Democracy’s “Democracy Award” in 1997, Lee is the founding chairman of Hong Kong’s Democratic Party, now considered part of the pro-US camp’s old guard.

While Martin Lee has long been highly visible on the pro-western Hong Kong scene, a younger generation of activists emerged during the 2014 Occupy Central protests with a new brand of localized politics.

Teenager Vs. Superpower, with help from a bigger superpower

Image
Joshua Wong meets with Sen. Marco Rubio in Washington on May 8, 2017

Joshua Wong was just 17 years old when the Umbrella Movement took form in 2014. After emerging in the protest ranks as one of the more charismatic voices, he was steadily groomed as the pro-West camp’s teenage poster child. Wong received lavish praised in Time magazine, Fortune, and Foreign Policy as a “freedom campaigner,” and became the subject of an award-winning Netflix documentary called “Joshua: Teenager vs. Superpower.”

Unsurprisingly, these puff pieces have overlooked Wong’s ties to the United States government’s regime-change apparatus. For instance, National Endowment for Democracy’s National Democratic Institute (NDI) maintains a close relationship with Demosistō, the political party Wong founded in 2016 with fellow Umbrella movement alumnus Nathan Law.

In August, a candid photo surfaced of Wong and Law meeting with Julie Eadeh, the political counselor at the U.S. Consulate General in Hong Kong, raising questions about the content of the meeting and setting off a diplomatic showdown between Washington and Beijing.

The Office of the Commissioner of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Hong Kong submitted a formal complaint with the US consulate general, calling on the US “to immediately make a clean break from anti-China forces who stir up trouble in Hong Kong, stop sending out wrong signals to violent offenders, refrain from meddling with Hong Kong affairs and avoid going further down the wrong path.”

The pro-Beijing Hong Kong newspaper Ta Kung Pao published personal details about Eadeh, including the names of her children and her address. State Department spokesperson Morgan Ortagus lashed out, accusing the Chinese government of being behind the leak but offering no evidence. “I don’t think that leaking an American diplomat’s private information, pictures, names of their children, I don’t think that is a formal protest, that is what a thuggish regime would do,” she said at a State Department briefing.

But the photo underscored the close relationship between Hong Kong’s pro-west movement and the US government. Since the 2014 Occupy Central protests that vaulted Wong into prominence, he and his peers have been assiduously cultivated by the elite Washington institutions to act as the faces and voices of Hong Kong’s burgeoning anti-China movement.

In September 2015, Wong, Martin Lee, and University of Hong Kong law professor Benny Tai Lee were honored by Freedom House, a right-wing soft-power organization that is heavily funded by the National Endowment for Democracy and other arms of the US government.

Just days after Trump’s election as president in November 2016, Wong was back in Washington to appeal for more US support. “Being a businessman, I hope Donald Trump could know the dynamics in Hong Kong and know that to maintain the business sector benefits in Hong Kong, it’s necessary to fully support human rights in Hong Kong to maintain the judicial independence and the rule of law,” he said.

Wong’s visit provided occasion for the Senate’s two most aggressively neoconservative members, Marco Rubio and Tom Cotton, to introduce the “Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act,” which would “identify those responsible for abduction, surveillance, detention and forced confessions, and the perpetrators will have their US assets, if any… frozen and their entry to the country denied.”

Wong was then taken on a junket of elite US institutions including the right-wing Heritage Foundation think tank and the newsrooms of the New York Times and Financial Times. He then held court with Rubio, Cotton, Pelosi, and Sen. Ben Sasse.

In September 2017, Rubio, Ben Cardin, Tom Cotton, Sherrod Brown, and Cory Gardner signed off on a letter to Wong, Law and fellow anti-China activist Alex Chow, praising them for their “efforts to build a genuinely autonomous Hong Kong.” The bipartisan cast of senators proclaimed that “the United States cannot stand idly by.”

A year later, Rubio and his colleagues nominated the trio of Wong, Law, and Chow for the 2018 Nobel Peace Prize.

Washington’s support for the designated spokesmen of the “retake Hong Kong movement” was supplement with untold sums of money from US regime-change outfits like the National Endowment for Democracy (NED) and subsidiaries like the National Democratic Institute (NDI) to civil society, media and political groups.

As journalist Alex Rubinstein reported, the Hong Kong Human Rights Monitor, a key member of the coalition that organized against the now-defunct extradition law, has received more than $2 million in NED funds since 1995. And other groups in the coalition reaped hundreds of thousands of dollars from the NED and NDI last year alone.

Image
While US lawmakers nominate Hong Kong protest leaders for peace prizes and pump their organizations with money to “promote democracy,” the demonstrations have begun to spiral out of control.

From the “Marginal Violence Theory” to the mob violence reality

After the extradition law was scrapped, the protests moved into a more aggressive phase, launching “hit and run attacks” against government targets, erecting roadblocks, besieging police stations, and generally embracing the extreme modalities put on display during US-backed regime-change operations from Ukraine to Venezuela to Nicaragua.

The techniques clearly reflected the training many activists have received from Western soft-power outfits. But they also bore the mark of Jimmy Lai’s media operation.

In addition to the vast sums Lai spent on political parties directly involved in the protests, his media group created an animated video “showing how to resist police in case force was used to disperse people in a mass protest.”

While dumping money into the Hong Kong’s pro-US political camp in 2013, Lai traveled to Taiwan for a secret roundtable consultation with Shih Ming-teh, a key figure in Taiwan’s social movement that forced then-president Chen Shui-bian to resign in 2008. Shih reportedly instructed Lai on non-violent tactics to bring the government to heel, emphasizing the importance of a commitment to go to jail.

According to journalist Peter Lee, “Shih supposedly gave Lai advice on putting students, young girls, and mothers with children in the vanguard of the street protests, in order to attract the support of the international community and press, and to sustain the movement with continual activities to keep it dynamic and fresh.” Lai reportedly turned off his recording device during multiple sections of Shih’s tutorial.

One protester explained to the New York Times how the movement attempted to embrace a strategy called, “Marginal Violence Theory”: By using “mild force” to provoke security services into attacking the protesters, the protesters aimed to shift international sympathy away from the state.

But as the protest movement intensifies, its rank-and-file are doing away with tactical restraint and lashing out at their targets with full fury. They have thrown molotov cocktails into intersections to block traffic; attacked vehicles and their drivers for attempting to break through roadblocks; beaten opponents with truncheons; attacked a wounded man with a US flag; menaced a reporter into deleting her photos; kidnapped and beat a journalist senseless; beat a mainland traveler unconscious and prevented paramedics from reaching the victim; and hurled petrol bombs at police officers.

The charged atmosphere has provided a shot in the arm to Lai’s media empire, which had been suffering heavy losses since the last round of national protests in 2014. After the mass marches against the extradition bill on June 9, which Lai’s Apple Daily aggressively promoted, his Next Digital doubled in value, according to Eji Insight.

Meanwhile, the protest leaders show no sign of backing down. Nathan Law, the youth activist celebrated in Washington and photographed meeting with US officials in Hong Kong, took to Twitter to urge his peers to soldier on: “We have to persist and keep the faith no matter how devastated the reality seems to be,” he wrote.

Law was tweeting from New Haven, Connecticut, where he was enrolled with a full scholarship at Yale University. While the young activist basked in the adulation of his US patrons thousands of miles from the chaos he helped spark, a movement that defined itself as a “leaderless resistance” forged ahead back home.

Dan Cohen is a journalist and co-producer of the award-winning documentary, Killing Gaza. He has produced widely distributed video reports and print dispatches from across Israel-Palestine, Latin America, the US-Mexico border and Washington DC. Follow him on Twitter at @DanCohen3000.
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Re: Welcome to Hong Kong City Run By Police & Gangsters

Postby seemslikeadream » Mon Aug 19, 2019 3:24 pm

Twitter says it has uncovered a "significant state-backed information operation" originating from inside China aimed "deliberately and specifically attempting to sow political discord in Hong Kong."
Facebook says that "based on a tip shared by Twitter" it has also taken down 7 pages, 3 groups and 5 accounts "involved in coordinated inauthentic behavior as part of a small network that originated in China and focused on Hong Kong"

Facebook, Twitter accuse China of running disinformation campaign against Hong Kong protesters
Annie Palmer
Published an hour ago
Updated Moments Ago

Twitter and Facebook have suspended numerous accounts that are believed to be tied to a Chinese disinformation campaign against the Hong Kong pro-democracy protests.

Twitter said Monday it suspended 936 accounts that are thought to be related to the activity. The company said the disinformation campaign was designed to “sow political discord in Hong Kong, including undermining the legitimacy and political protest movement on the ground.”

Over the weekend, approximately 1.7 million anti-government protesters gathered in Hong Kong to rally peacefully against the Chinese government, which assumed rule of the former British colony in 1997. Protests erupted in June following a now-suspended bill that would allow criminal suspects in Hong Kong to be extradited to mainland China.

“Based on our intensive investigations, we have reliable evidence to support that this is a coordinated state-backed operation,” the company said in a blog post. “Specifically, we have identified large clusters of accounts behaving in a coordinated manner to amplify messages related to the Hong Kong protests.”

The move comes after social media site Pinboard

Pinboard
@Pinboard
Every day I go out and see stuff with my own eyes, and then I go to report it on Twitter and see promoted tweets saying the opposite of what I saw. Twitter is taking money from Chinese propaganda outfits and running these promoted tweets against the top Hong Kong protest hashtags
View image on Twitter

1,973
8:01 AM - Aug 17, 2019
Twitter Ads info and privacy

1,529 people are talking about this

that China was using Twitter to distribute posts from state media discrediting the protests.

Twitter is blocked in China, but many of the accounts it discovered were using virtual private networks, which encrypt and anonymize web traffic. The accounts it suspended represent the “most active” portion of the broader spam campaign, which it estimates to include about 200,000 accounts.

As a result of the announcement, Twitter said it would no longer accept advertising from state-controlled news media entities.

The company didn’t call out any specific news outlets in the post, but said it includes any entities that are “either financially or editorially controlled by the state.” The organizations still be able to use the platform for communication, just not to serve advertisements.

Twitter clarified that the updated policy doesn’t apply to taxpayer-funded entities, such as independent public broadcasters.

Separately, Facebook said that a tip from Twitter led it to remove seven pages, three groups and five accounts involved in coordinated inauthentic behavior targeting Hong Kong. About 15,500 accounts followed one or more of the now-deactivated pages, while roughly 2,200 accounts joined at least one of the groups, the company said.

“We’re taking down these Pages, Groups and accounts based on their behavior, not the content they posted,” Nathaniel Gleicher, Facebook’s head of cybersecurity policy, said in a post. “As with all of these takedowns, the people behind this activity coordinated with one another and used fake accounts to misrepresent themselves, and that was the basis for our action.”

Individuals involved in the campaign used fake accounts, some of which had been already spotted and disabled by Facebook’s automated systems, to manage pages posing as news sites, post in groups, share content and direct users to sites off of Facebook, the company said.

Shares of Twitter climbed more than 3% in afternoon trading. Facebook’s stock increased as much as 1.4%.
https://cnb.cx/2TIYYdn
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Re: Welcome to Hong Kong City Run By Police & Gangsters

Postby seemslikeadream » Fri Aug 23, 2019 5:43 pm


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T_heym4ghXI


Guardian News
Published on Aug 23, 2019

Thousands of protesters have formed a human chain across Hong Kong on the 30th anniversary of the Baltic Way, when about two million people created a chain across Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania to protest against Soviet occupation. More than two months of protests began in June over a now-suspended extradition bill, but have and have since expanded into a wider movement against the erosion of liberties under Chinese rule
Hong Kong protesters join hands in 30-mile human chain
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Welcome to Hong Kong City Run By Police & Gangsters

Postby seemslikeadream » Fri Sep 06, 2019 10:54 am

The American Father And Son Exporting Tear Gas To Hong Kong
A BuzzFeed News investigation found low-paid American workers producing tear gas in potentially dangerous conditions. It's then shipped to Hong Kong, where it's used against pro-democracy protesters.
sub-buzz-462-1567712872-1.jpg

Rosalind Adams10:31 PM - 12 Aug 2019
A BuzzFeed News investigation found low-paid American workers producing tear gas in potentially dangerous conditions. It's then shipped to Hong Kong, where it's used against pro-democracy protesters.


Courtesy Zeynep Tufekci
A spent tear gas canister manufactured by Nonlethal Technologies, seen in Hong Kong on Aug. 24.
HOMER CITY, Pennsylvania — There’s no sign for Nonlethal Technologies when you drive past the pair of faded yellow gates on the side of the highway in western Pennsylvania.

Despite its name, there isn’t much sign of any technology once you get inside the gates, either — there are just a few rows of worn-looking shipping containers clustered together. But the little-known company is a major exporter of tear gas and other crowd-control equipment and has sold supplies to a number of countries, including repressive regimes, for years.

Most recently, hundreds of the company’s tear gas canisters have ended up on the streets of Hong Kong, where police have used them to crack down on pro-democracy protests that have rocked the city for more than three months. The demonstrations have shifted from large-scale marches that have brought as many as 2 million people to the streets to standoffs between police and protesters that often look more like guerilla warfare.

The trail of tear gas sailing through the air has become a familiar sight in Hong Kong as police launch round after round of these projectiles into the crowds of protesters. The acrid smell of tear gas is unmistakable — it fills your throat and nose and burns your eyes and skin, unless you wear a respirator. It can make you cough until you vomit.

teargas_1.jpg

A man uses a fire extinguisher to put out a tear gas canister as they confront police in Hong Kong on Wednesday, Aug. 14, 2019. Vincent Yu / AP Images

teargas_2a.jpg

Protesters try to extinguish tear gas canisters during a demonstration in Wan Chai neighbourhood in Hong Kong on August 11, 2019. Thomas Peter / Reuters

By early August, 1,800 rounds of tear gas had been fired at protesters, according to the police — including 800 in a single day. Some come in the form of projectiles, which are launched from firearms, while others are more like grenades, and are thrown by hand. The numbers have only grown since then. The indiscriminate use of tear gas by police has been criticized by the UN Commissioner on Human Rights and Amnesty International, including for firing tear gas into subway stations, outside of a nursing home, and sometimes directly at individual protesters.

BuzzFeed News traveled nearly 8,000 miles from Hong Kong to Homer City, Pennsylvania, to learn more about the crowd-control equipment being shipped overseas.

Nonlethal Technologies is run by a father–son duo whose family has been in the tear gas business for at least three generations. While the pair control much of the sales and operations, BuzzFeed News spoke with a half dozen former employees — most of whom had each spent at least a decade working at the factory. A BuzzFeed News investigation based on a review of federal inspection records, court documents, and interviews with former employees found the company relies on American workers who are paid low wages to assemble products with hazardous materials and few safety measures to protect them.

Employees described aging equipment that caught fire and injuries and severe irritation caused by working long hours with chemicals. After one of its buildings burned down, the company declined to rebuild the facility, instead shifting more of the production into shipping containers. The company has been fined multiple times for safety violations by the Department of Labor; the owner himself severely burned his hands in a fire while handling hazardous chemicals. Yet while its American workers are paid very little to work in potentially dangerous conditions, its shipments continue — largely to foreign governments who reap the benefits of its products, employees said, including Turkey, Bahrain, and Egypt during the height of the Arab Spring.

“Your skin burns all day long. You’re outside in a full suit and gas mask but it still burns,” said Mike Dawson, who worked at Nonlethal Technologies for 15 years and became a supervisor. “You could never get used to it.”

One of the owners of Nonlethal Technologies answered questions briefly outside the factory before asking BuzzFeed News to leave the premises, and did not respond to more in-depth emailed questions.


Explosives
storage
Grenade
production
building
Explosives
production
building
Flammable
liquids
storage
Production trailers
Chemical storage
and mixing trailers
Junk pyrotechnics storage
BuzzFeed News; Google Maps
The layout of Nonlethal Technologies’ factory, according to former workers.
Shifts at Nonlethal Technologies begin at 6:30 a.m. and stretch until 5 p.m. The starting pay is $9.50 an hour, barely up from $8 an hour when the factory opened nearly 20 years ago, said workers. It’s hard, repetitive work, and lots of people don’t last long in the job.

There are a few buildings on the site, including for storage and assembly, but much of the work preparing tear gas is done in large, metal shipping containers with the doors open. Workers carry the chemicals among the containers for each step of the process, so they’re largely working outside.

Most of the time staff are required to wear a protective suit, gloves, and a full-face gas mask. It’s not pleasant working in the cold of the winter, but in the summer, all the gear and chemicals become even more oppressive, said employees.

“The tear gas sticks to your sweat. And there’s no shade, there’s no ventilation,” said Jen Livengood, who worked at the facility for more than a decade until last year. “Sweat is rolling off of you and you do get rashes.”

Employees who spent years working at the factory told BuzzFeed News they stayed for the weekly paychecks, even if they weren’t large. With only around 30 employees, the company’s sales were estimated at $8 million a year in 2017, according to Visiongain, a UK-based market research firm.

There aren’t a lot of job opportunities in Indiana County, where the factory is based. Lots of people work in manufacturing or retail or health care, county data shows, and the per capita income is 30% lower than the rest of the state. In 2016, two-thirds of the county voted for Trump.

“There’s a lot of low-class impoverished people around here,” said one former longtime worker who got the job after seeing a sign outside the factory and was soon hired.

The most common type of tear gas used today — and the one that’s filled the streets of Hong Kong — is known as CS, or chlorobenzalmalononitrile. The Chemical Weapons Convention bans the use of tear gas in war but categorizes riot-control agents like CS separately from other chemical weapons, allowing police to use it to disperse crowds.

CS is not in fact a gas — at Nonlethal Technologies, the chemical base is mixed with hot water until it forms a white crystal, which is laid out on tables in one of the shipping containers until it dries.

Once it’s dry, workers carry the CS, which first takes on a Play-Doh–type consistency, to the next shipping container using buckets. There, it’s combined with a pyrotechnic mix that includes powdered sugar and several other chemicals, like magnesium oxide and potassium chlorate. Sugar is flammable and provides a cheap accelerant, while potassium chlorate is an explosive.

The final mixture is shaken up in large bags until it becomes a fine powder. That’s poured into a large pellet press that compounds the chemical mix into small, concentrated tablets that are later loaded into canisters or projectiles.

Even with the protective gear, flakes of the chemicals get everywhere.

“It’s all powder until it’s set off. But it’s very strong and concentrated,” said Emily Panczak, who worked in production there until earlier this year. Several other former workers said the flakes could get in their masks or in the suit, irritating their skin.

“The whole place has CS all over, it can’t be helped,” Panczak added. “It all sucked, but it was a steady job.”

Once the chemical production process is finished, workers assemble the tear gas projectiles by hand too, loading the primer — the part that ignites the explosive — and the tear gas pellet and sealing the projectile. Even the bright blue lettering of “Nonlethal Technologies” on the outside of the silver canisters is screen-printed by hand.

When Bob Mahnke got a job at Nonlethal Technologies, he spent a few weeks just working on loading the primers into the projectiles. But after a day of loading the tear gas pellets into the canisters, he had a bad reaction to the chemicals, Mahnke said.

Even working in protective gear, the chemicals severely affected him, he said. Mahnke can’t quite recall how it happened — the air had blown some material under his gas mask, or maybe he’d wiped his brow — but by the time he went on break, his whole face had started to redden and swell.

“My face was so swollen that my left eye was completely shut. And then my right one completely shut. I looked like a totally different person,” he recalled. He had to quit the job.


Rosalind Adams / BuzzFeed News
Nonlethal Technologies in Homer City, Pennsylvania.
Nonlethal Technologies is owned by the Oberdick family, which has been in the tear gas industry for three generations. In the 1930s, Gus Oberdick started out as the secretary to the president of Federal Laboratories — America’s oldest tear gas factory. Back then, the company made its tear gas in Pittsburgh, selling domestically to authorities wanting to stop bank robbers or to break up labor riots but also to foreign governments, like Cuba and Honduras.

Gus Oberdick’s son Jim later founded Nonlethal Technologies with his own son, Scott — both men also worked as chemists at Federal Laboratories, according to company sales materials and state business filings.

Nonlethal Technologies started off modestly in 2000 after it acquired a majority stake in a nearby tear gas company. It was first just a handful of employees, recalled Shawna McCutcheon, who worked in human resources for more than a decade until 2017.

By the end of 2002, the company had moved its production facility to Homer City and reached around $250,000 in sales for the year, court records show. Early orders came in for a couple thousand pieces at a time, said Mike Dawson, who was the company’s first employee. But things took off after 2010, he said — right as the Arab Spring was causing turmoil in the Middle East. “We started getting huge orders for 300,000 pieces at a time,” said Dawson.

Egypt and Turkey and Bahrain all placed orders, he said. Sales reps came with translators to inspect and test the product, confirmed multiple employees.


John Moore / Getty Images
A rubber bullet cartridge manufactured by Nonlethal Technologies, found in Manama, Bahrain.
Nonlethal Technologies’ sales materials say that its testing procedures ensure “the highest reliability and performance of our end products and strict conformity to our printed specifications.”

But employees said the testing involved little more than using a stopwatch to check how long it took for a product to ignite or emit smoke in one of the storage containers.

Sometimes the countries it sold to made requests to change formulations of the products — like a faster-burning pellet or a longer delay on the fuse, said several employees who worked directly on the orders. “Turkey was always a pain in the ass. Always huge orders made to spec,” said Livengood.

As Nonlethal Technologies started aggressively increasing its operations, it was also relying on secondhand pellet presses and then repairing the equipment and replacing parts, said employees.

All the time, it was relying on low-skilled workers who were paid little. Some smoked pot on break, said multiple workers, but there was no employee drug testing. “I loved the people I worked with. But they're making low wages so you're not getting the cream of the crop,” said Livengood, who became a supervisor at the factory. “I was always afraid every day of something that could go wrong.”

In summer 2012, one of the buildings at the factory caught fire. The head of human resources, McCutcheon, told a local news outlet at the time that she believed it was due to one of the pellet-pressing machines catching on fire. Dawson, who told BuzzFeed News that he was nearby, said the fire was so intense he watched the flames shoot straight through the roof, engulfing the building within minutes. Many of the chemicals on the premises can’t simply be extinguished with water, and local news footage from the incident shows plumes of black smoke as firefighters from a half dozen fire departments work to put out the flames. The fire took down the whole building.

Fires also broke out at the factory in 2004 and 2009, according to local news reports.

Shortly after the 2012 fire, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, or OSHA, issued four violations, including for mismanagement of highly hazardous chemicals, and fined the company more than $12,000.

When asked outside his office at Nonlethal Technologies about the OSHA violations, Oberdick said “it’s pretty normal for manufacturing.” Oberdick then pulled out his phone and threatened to call the police if BuzzFeed News did not leave the premises.

Rather than rebuilding after the fire, Oberdick moved more of the operations into shipping containers. The metal containers at least helped contain any fires, said former employees. “If the machine caught on fire, we would just close the door to the shipping container and wait for it to burn out,” said Livengood.

After any such fire, workers would wait for the chemicals to be incinerated, and then sweep the ashes out of the storage container and refill the pellet presses, said employees. “A lot of fires were unreported,” said Dawson.

In addition to tear gas, the company recently started getting huge orders for “flash bangs” — grenades that explode into a burst of sound and light and smoke. The chemicals in that mixture — a combination of aluminum powder and potassium perchlorate — are volatile.

Employees said they wore bracelets clipped onto copper wires that ran into the ground in an effort to stop the buildup of static electricity, which could set the powders off and risk causing a fire. They also wore gloves and eye protection. The assembly of the flash bangs, which became a popular product, was also done by hand.

“My process was I’d fold a notecard in half. I would mix up a batch of flash powder, put it into the notecard and brush it into the grenade body itself,” said a former worker who worked in production.

“You could have 16 grams of a really explosive material just right in the palm of your hand,” added Dawson.

The processes that workers described raised the concern of safety experts. “That doesn’t sound like a very safe process to me,” said Kenneth Brown, a consultant on chemical safety standards, told BuzzFeed News. “Things like this are usually automated. That’s what robots are for,” he added.

Scott Oberdick himself was in a storage container helping make the flash bangs a few years ago when his hands caught fire, several employees said. “I saw him come out of the trailer, holding his hands up in gloves and they were just melting off,” said Dawson.

Oberdick admitted he burned his hands in a fire when asked about the incident, but did not address any details.

“There were really no safety practices when I was there,” said Dawson, who spent 15 years working at the factory. More recently, OSHA cited Nonlethal Technologies again for mishandling hazardous chemicals in April 2018 and issued the company a fine of more than $6,000.

Still, the big orders have continued.


Thomas Peter / Reuters
Tear gas canisters manufactured by Nonlethal Technologies are lined up after police clashed with protesters in Hong Kong, Aug. 25.
Canisters produced by Nonlethal Technologies have littered the streets of Hong Kong all summer. BuzzFeed News recently found one at a protest that was dated January 2019.

There aren’t many restrictions on US companies selling tear gas overseas, beyond applying for an export license from the Department of Commerce. Companies can apply for the licenses without having a specific contract or order in place, and a license can cover multiple shipments.

Federal regulations also outline that the government generally grants these licenses unless there’s evidence that a country may have violated international human rights standards.

The licenses themselves, however, are confidential, and it’s unclear when they were issued for companies like Nonlethal Technologies that have shipped to Hong Kong. Human rights advocates have called on the US government to stop the shipments altogether, citing the way Hong Kong police have used tear gas. In July, Amnesty International wrote a letter to the Commerce Department demanding it suspend shipments of all crowd-control equipment.

Others are concerned that licenses have recently been granted despite the increasingly heavy-handed approach of the police. “The question is whether the Department of Commerce approved any licenses since the unrest in Hong Kong started,” said Susan Waltz, a public policy professor at the University of Michigan and a former board member of Amnesty International.

And even though tear gas is widely used, its effects are not well understood, and the published studies declaring it a safe tool don’t stand up to modern toxicological standards, according to Sven-Eric Jordt, a professor at Duke University.


A protester receives medical attention after tear gas and pepper spray was used by riot police during a protest, outside Mong Kok police station, in Hong Kong on September 2, 2019. Tyrone Siu / Reuters


A protester is overcome by tear gas near the Shum Shui Po police station in Hong Kong on Wednesday, Aug. 14, 2019. Vincent Yu / AP Images

“I’m very concerned that we’re underestimating the toxicity, especially when it’s fired in these more dense cities like Cairo and Hong Kong,” he said.

Although there are guidelines — such as not firing tear gas indoors — it’s impossible to say how well enforced they are, said Jordt. “There’s no rules that these companies insist on once the products leave the US,” he said.

Joshua Wong, who led the 2014 pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong known as the Umbrella Movement, has repeatedly called for the US to stop sending crowd-control equipment. Last Friday, Wong was one of a number of activists and lawmakers arrested in Hong Kong as the city headed into its 13th weekend of protests. He is now out on bail.

These calls have been echoed by politicians in the US. Rep. Jim McGovern, a Democrat from Massachusetts, said he was planning on introducing legislation to suspend US sales of munitions and other crowd-control equipment to Hong Kong.

Due to the excessive use of force & lack of restraint by #HongKong authorities, I will soon introduce legislation to suspend U.S. sales of munitions, police & crowd control equipment to the #HongKong police. https://t.co/QnDWYZQka1
And in August, US legislators, including McGovern, wrote to the secretary of commerce, Wilbur Ross, and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, calling for a ban on exports of tear gas from the US to Hong Kong.

“These steps are a necessary response to credible reports of excessive force being used by the Hong Kong police targeting individuals engaged in peaceful demonstrations against the Hong Kong Government’s proposed extradition bill and the fast-eroding space for political participation,” the letter read.

The administration has not commented on whether it will suspend sales of crowd-control equipment.
https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/ro ... ade-in-usa
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Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Welcome to Hong Kong City Run By Police & Gangsters

Postby seemslikeadream » Fri Oct 04, 2019 9:28 am

no Glenn a mobster born into the family wouldn't do that would he?

Image


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eJd1y0TPPl8


Trump promised Xi US silence on Hong Kong democracy protests as trade talks stalled
(CNN) — During a private phone call in June, President Donald Trump promised Chinese President Xi Jinping that the US would remain quiet on pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong while trade talks continued, two sources familiar with knowledge of the call tell CNN.

The remarkable pledge to the Chinese leader is a dramatic departure from decades of US support for human rights in China and shows just how eager Trump is to strike a deal with Beijing as the trade war weighs on the US economy.

And like other calls with the leaders of Ukraine, Russia and Saudi Arabia, records of Trump's call with Xi were moved to a highly-classified, codeword-protected system, greatly limiting the number of administration officials who were aware of the conversation.

Trump's commitment to China had immediate and far-reaching effects throughout the US government as the President's message was sent far and wide.

In June, the State Department told then-US general counsel in Hong Kong, Kurt Tong, to cancel a planned speech on the protests in Washington because the President had promised Xi no one from the administration would talk about the issue.

Tong was also slated to speak at a Washington-based think tank in early July but the State Department asked for that event to be canceled as well. That speech was ultimately rescheduled for after Tong's scheduled retirement later that month meaning he eventually had the opportunity to speak about Hong Kong but as a former official.

The Financial Times first reported some details of the President's commitment.
At the time, reporters asked State Department spokeswoman Morgan Ortagus if Tong was barred from making a tough speech after Trump and Xi's trade truce during the G20 summit.

"I believe that that was based off of anonymous reports, and that's not something that we ever validate here at the State Department. I don't see much truth to that," she responded.

Trump has deferred to China on the situation in Hong Kong when asked about it publicly in recent months.

"Well, something is probably happening with Hong Kong because when you look at, you know, what's going on, they've had riots for a long period of time. And I don't know what China's attitude is," Trump told reporters on the South Lawn of the White House on August 1.

"Somebody said that at some point they're going to want to stop that. But that's between Hong Kong and that's between China, because Hong Kong is a part of China. They'll have to deal with that themselves. They don't need advice," he added.

He echoed that sentiment in a tweet on August 14.
"I know President Xi of China very well. He is a great leader who very much has the respect of his people. He is also a good man in a 'tough business.' I have ZERO doubt that if President Xi wants to quickly and humanely solve the Hong Kong problem, he can do it. Personal meeting?"
https://www.cnn.com/2019/10/04/politics ... index.html
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
User avatar
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Re: Welcome to Hong Kong City Run By Police & Gangsters

Postby seemslikeadream » Sat Oct 12, 2019 11:09 am



Protesters in Hong Kong continue to wear face masks during rallies despite a government ban on them during demonstrations.
They are refusing to back down, promising more action against the government.
Al Jazeera's Adrian Brown reports from Hong Kong.



Google pulls Hong Kong protest role-playing app
CNN blocked from asking NBA players about China fallout
Hong Kong (CNN Business) — Google has pulled a role-playing game based on the Hong Kong protests from its app store.

Google (GOOGL) said in a statement Friday that the company has a "long-standing policy prohibiting developers from capitalizing on sensitive events such as attempting to make money from serious ongoing conflicts or tragedies through a game."
In the app, called "The Revolution of Our Times," people could role-play as Hong Kong protesters. Users could make purchases while playing, buying things like protective gear and weapons as they move through different stages in the game, according to local media reports.
The removal of the app was "not in response to a government request but because the app violated the Play Store's policies," a Google spokesperson said.

Protests have been taking place in Hong Kong for months and dozens of foreign companies that do business in mainland China and the semi-autonomous city have been caught up in the fallout.
Apple removes app used by Hong Kong protesters to track police movements
Earlier this week, Apple (AAPL) pulled a real-time mapping app called HKmap.live from its App Store. The app used various emojis to communicate what was happening across Hong Kong: A dog marked where police officers were present; a police car showed where police vehicles were located; and a camera marked the location of a livestream.
Apple said it had received complaints about the app from several people in Hong Kong, saying it had been used in ways that "endanger law enforcement and residents in Hong Kong."

Apple's decision came soon after Chinese state media criticized it for allowing HKmap to be downloaded.

The National Basketball Association was also drawn into the controversy around the Hong Kong protests last week.
The American league is facing a ferocious backlash in China after Houston Rockets executive Daryl Morey tweeted support for the protests. That prompted all of the NBA's official Chinese partners to suspend business ties with the league.

Like many other US internet platforms, Google's most popular products — search, YouTube, Gmail — have been banned in mainland China for years, blacked out by a vast government censorship apparatus known as the Great Firewall.

CNN's Isaac Yee and Laura He contributed to this report.
https://www.cnn.com/2019/10/11/tech/goo ... index.html


U.S. company supplying tear gas to Hong Kong police faces mounting criticism
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Another U.S. senator has joined a chorus against Pennsylvania-based NonLethal Technologies Inc for selling riot gear to Hong Kong that is being used against pro-democracy protesters.

FILE PHOTO: A riot police officer fires a tear gas canister toward anti-government protesters during a demonstration in the Tseung Kwan O residential area in Kowloon, Hong Kong, China, October 7, 2019. REUTERS/Athit Perawongmetha/File Photo
The privately held company, which makes and exports a wide range of riot and crowd control equipment for military and law enforcement agencies, has been in the spotlight ever since it was discovered that Hong Kong police are employing its tear gas canisters to disperse anti-government demonstrations.

In one photo that has been widely shared on social media, NonLethal’s name is stamped on the casing of a spent tear gas canister.

The use of U.S.-made gear to quell protests has prompted several lawmakers to call for halting and even banning tear gas exports to the city. In July, Senator Ted Cruz, a Republican, proposed in a tweet that the United States consider banning exports of tear gas to Hong Kong if the attacks on the protesters were not stopped.

Similarly, in August, U.S. Representatives Chris Smith, a Republican, and James McGovern, a Democrat, wrote to Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Secretary of Commerce Wilber Ross, asking them to suspend future sales of crowd and riot control equipment to Hong Kong police.

They followed up their letter with a bipartisan bill in the House of Representatives last month, which seeks to prohibit commercial exports of certain nonlethal crowd control items and defense articles and services to the city. If passed, the ban would take effect within 30 days.

U.S. Senator Rick Scott, a Florida Republican, on Thursday became the latest to raise concerns about the exports.

In a letter to NonLethal’s president shared on Twitter, Scott said the sales were equivalent to supporting efforts of the Chinese president to “harm ordinary citizens and peaceful protesters.” He urged the manufacturer of tear gas to “put human rights above profits.”

The protests have plunged the city, an Asian financial hub, into its worst crisis since it returned to Chinese rule in 1997, posing the biggest popular challenge to Chinese President Xi Jinping since he came to power in 2012.

What began as opposition to a now-withdrawn extradition bill has evolved into a pro-democracy movement fanned by fears that China is stifling Hong Kong’s freedoms, guaranteed under a “one country, two systems” formula introduced in 1997.

China denies the accusations and says foreign countries, including Britain and the United States, are fomenting unrest.

In his Oct. 10 letter, Scott said during a recent trip to the city he saw firsthand how the company’s products were used in a “dangerous and malicious manner to intentionally harm protesters.”

He requested to meet with the company’s president, Scott Oberdick, to discuss his concerns.

Oberdick, however, told Reuters on Friday that he had not seen Scott’s letter. When asked about the criticism his company has been facing for selling tear gas to Hong Kong police, Oberdick hung up the phone.

NonLethal does not share its financial details with public. However, in 2017, it was listed as one of the top 10 companies in the world producing riot-control systems, according to London-based market research firm Visiongain.

According to its website, the company provides “a full range of less lethal grenades and less lethal ammunition to allow the most effective level of force to be used for various situations.” However, for overseas sales, most of its products require an export license from the United States Department of Commerce.

An online petition, urging the White House to suspend any export application of crowd control equipment to Hong Kong, has garnered more than 110,000 signatures.

Amnesty International has also called on countries including the United States to halt all transfers of less lethal “crowd control” equipment - including water cannon vehicles, tear gas, pepper spray, rubber bullets, projectile launchers and parts and components - to Hong Kong.

Reporting by Rajesh Kumar Singh in Chicago; Editing by Matthew Lewis
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-hong ... SKBN1WQ2M1
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
User avatar
seemslikeadream
 
Posts: 32090
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