字幕表 動画を再生する 英語字幕をプリント In Hong Kong, five anti-China, pro-independence candidates won seats in the Legislative Council. But the Chinese government warned against any promotion of independence, threatening to impose punishment. Today, animosity between Mainland Chinese citizens and Hong Kong citizens has led to outright violence and protests. So we wanted to know, what exactly is the nature of this unique and complicated relationship? Well, The officially named Hong Kong Special Administrative Region of the People's Republic of China is not an independent country, but modern day Hong Kong was actually born out the fall of the British Empire. From about the mid-1800s Hong Kong was a British occupied colony, stemming from the spoils of the Treaty of Nanking after the First Opium War. But in 1997, following years of Sino-British negotiations, the British left Hong Kong, ceding it to China, but under a new form of autonomy called “one country, two systems”. Essentially, this was a compromise between Hong Kong wanting to be fully autonomous and sovereign, and China wanting to exert control of the neighboring territory. Although the two are indeed one country - The People’s Republic of China - Hong Kong is relatively autonomous. It has its own government, with independent executive, judicial, and legislative branches, and pretty much everything else a sovereign country could have: a legal system, law enforcement, immigration policy, even its own currency - the Hong Kong dollar, also called a “Hongky”. But the autonomous region is wholly dependent on China for its military, which has a specific Hong Kong military division, and in return, Hong Kong cedes a level of control to the Chinese government. This relatively vague level of control has been uneasy for many Hong Kong residents, who are culturally and politically separate from Mainland China, and the two groups have repeatedly clashed over their differences. A 2014 survey found that more than three times the number of residents considered themselves to be purely Hongkongers, as opposed to purely Chinese. A growing stereotype against people from Mainland China is that they are rude or impolite, while those from the Mainland see Hong Kong residents as spoiled and ungrateful. Many in Hong Kong believe that the Mainland has undue influence within the region. One example led to widespread protests in 2014, when China’s Communist Party attempted to implement reforms that would effectively pre-screen candidates in Hong Kong’s elections. As many as 100,000 protesters marched in the streets of Hong Kong, and the reforms were eventually rejected the following year. A poll from 2016 found that roughly 17% of Hongkongers support independence by 2050, although among those aged 15-24, roughly 40% supported independence. Mainland China and Hong Kong have different histories, cultures, and demographics, yet they also hold strong trade and travel relationships. This crossover has been ripe for cultural clashes, but the real distaste between the two is political. What each side owes the other, and how much control China seeks to exert on Hong Kong are delicate issues with no clear answers. As they struggle to find a middle ground, there is no question that more disagreements and protests hang on the horizon. This episode is brought to you by Squarespace. Creating a website with squarespace is simple, there’s no coding required. You get a custom domain for free if you sign up for a year on sqaurespace.com. And if you enter offer code Seeker Daily at checkout to get 10% off -- Squarespace. Set your website apart.
B2 中上級 中国と香港の複雑な関係 (China And Hong Kong's Complicated Relationship) 144 20 BH に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日 シェア シェア 保存 報告 動画の中の単語