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The 12-3 incident (Chinese: 一二·三事件; Portuguese: Motim 1-2-3) was a series of political demonstrations and riots against Portuguese colonial rule in Macau which occurred on December 3, 1966.
Earlier in the year a large scale labour protest turned violent in May. This protest also followed one of the largest corruption case involving Ao Man-long of the Macau public works just a month before in November. Macau's leaders in 2007 were chosen by a 300-member committee of mostly Beijing loyalists. Only 12 of the city's 29 legislators are ...
The protest initially started with the Macau pro-democracy camp and members of the labor union. The march went from Iao Hon Park to the government offices shouting slogans and waving banners. [ 1 ] The theme was to fight against Macau Government corruption, fight for democracy and to improve livelihood.
Pages in category "Protests in Macau" The following 4 pages are in this category, out of 4 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. 0–9.
An upside down PRC flag during the protest. The 2010 Macau labour protest (Chinese: 五.一 勞動節遊行) was a protest that occurred on Labour Day 1 May 2010 at Patane, St. Anthony Parish Macau Special Administrative Region of the People's Republic of China. [1] 1 May 2010 was also the opening day of the Shanghai 2010 expo in mainland China.
The 2007 Macau labour protest (2007年澳門勞動節遊行) was a large scale protest that occurred on Labour Day May 1, 2007 in the Macau Special Administrative Region of the People's Republic of China. The event eventually turned violent.
Around 100 protesters blocked a road leading to terminal one at Charles de Gaulle on Thursday, the airport operator said. Flights were unaffected. Watch live: Pension reform protests resume in Paris
Macau independence (Chinese: 澳門獨立; Portuguese: Independência de Macau) is a stance advocating for Macau's independence from the People's Republic of China.In 2016, the topic of Macau independence was brought up due to the controversy over the revision of Legislative Assembly of Macau election law, which is indirectly influenced by the Hong Kong Legislative Council oath-taking controversy.