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On May 18, 2021, Letep Ahmet, a director of the Japan Uyghur Association , commented during a discussion at the Hong Kong International Solidarity Campaign and Milk Tea Alliance event regarding the phrase "Today Hong Kong, Tomorrow Taiwan, the Day After Tomorrow Okinawa," stating, "A regime that has detained and tortured millions of people and ...
On 16 June, just one day after the Hong Kong government suspended the bill, a larger protest took place to push for its complete withdrawal. The protest was also in response to the perceived excessive use of force by the Hong Kong Police Force on 12 June. As the protests progressed, activists laid out five key demands.
9gag (stylized as 9GAG) is an online platform and social media website based in Hong Kong, [1] which allows its users to upload and share user-generated content or other content from external social media websites.
"This will get people really worried about how free Hong Kong’s internet will be like tomorrow," he said. Beijing imposed a sweeping national security law in 2020 to quell the months-long unrest.
The winning work by photographer Magus Yuen Kam-wa, and entitled "Hong Kong Symposium 2019″ – depicts a flower in a gas canister – examines basic human rights by exploring the impact of tear gas during the protests. [134] Photographer Ko Chung-ming participated in the 2020 Sony World Photography Awards with a series named Wounds of Hong ...
The protesters later engaged in scuffles with the media reporting the protest as they surrounded individual reporters and photographers, hitting cameras and throwing punches. The Hong Kong Press Photographers Association and Hong Kong Journalists Association condemned the violent behaviour of protesters during the rally. However no arrests were ...
In Chater Garden there was a march, with some holding US national flags and placards calling on President Trump to "make Hong Kong great again". [3] Tens of thousands of people gathered for anti-government protesters in Tsim Sha Tsui at the clock tower to march to the Hong Kong Coliseum in Hung Hom, with protesters
The Hong Kong Fire Services Department's preliminary initial records had changed from 10 to 7 injured. [20]On 6 September 2019, several sit-in protests were reported in September wherein protesters demanded MTR to release the footage of the closed-circuit television [26] and were "calling on police to apologise for excessive violence". [27]