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  • Protests started in Hong Kong in late September. What happened is that the Chinese government

  • had come out and said 'hey we know we promised your first fully-democratic election in 2017,

  • but we're going to approve any of the candidates who can run.' People started protesting and

  • then few days later, the thing that really escalated it was when Hong Kong police came

  • out with an unprecedented level of force to crack down on the protesters, which only further

  • outraged a lot of people in Hong Kong, drove more people into the streets where they're

  • now shutting down the financial district. To understand what's really happening here,

  • the larger forces at work, you have to go back to 1997. That's the year of what people

  • in Hong Kong call the handover, when it went from one of the last vestiges of the British

  • Empire to part of China. As part of the handover, China promised that Hong Kong would be able

  • to keep this really unusual level of freedom, and it would get to have these first fully-democratic

  • elections in 2017. It's called the One Country, Two Systems policy. So when China reneged

  • a little bit on its plan for the 2017 elections, it looked to a lot of people in Hong Kong

  • like it was the beginning of the end of One Country, Two Systems. And the thing that you

  • have to understand is that it's about more than just democracy, although that's important.

  • There's a kind of sense of Hong Kong exceptionalism. People there are much more affluent, much

  • more worldly. They really see themselves as very distinct from the rest of China. And

  • any move like this that feels like it's pulling them into the dictatorial rule of the communist

  • party in China is very scary to them. And part of what really makes that so scary is

  • the memory of Tiananmen Square, right, which happened in 1989 in Beijing. That memory is

  • much, much stronger in Hong Kong, where they hold an annual vigil every year. They're keeping

  • the flame alive for their fellow Chinese who can't. So, when police started coming

  • out in force late in these protests, they thought 'hey this doesn't look like Hong Kong,

  • this looks like Beijing.' So what you're seeing is not just a fight for, can we keep the election

  • rules that we have for 2017, it's a fight for, can they stay Hong Kong or are they going

  • to become just like the rest of China?

Protests started in Hong Kong in late September. What happened is that the Chinese government

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香港での抗議行動を2分で解説 (The protests in Hong Kong, explained in 2 minutes)

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    阿多賓 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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