Showing posts with label PRCinsurgency. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PRCinsurgency. Show all posts

June 4, 2017

Remembering Tiananmen, 20 years later

June 4th, 2009, marked the 20th anniversary of the military crackdown on student protesters gathered in Tiananmen Square in Beijing, China. Beginning in April of 1989, thousands of students and other citizens started gathering in groups large and small, protesting many issues, centered on a desire for freedom and democratic reform. By mid-May of 1989, hundreds of thousands of protesters occupied the square, staging hunger strikes, and asking for dialogue. Chinese authorities responded with a declaration of martial law, and sent soldiers and tanks from the People's Liberation Army, preparing to disperse the crowds. Late on June 3rd, 1989, the tanks and armored personnel carriers rolled into the square, killing and wounding many, mostly civilians - estimates vary widely, from several hundred to several thousand dead. The first 17 photos below were taken in 1989, the rest are from this year, as people remember the events, the ideals, and the fallout from that fateful day. (32 photos total)




This file photo taken twenty years ago on June 2, 1989 shows some of the hundreds of thousands of Chinese gathering around a 10-meter replica of the Statue of Liberty (center), called the Goddess of Democracy, in Tiananmen Square demanding democracy despite martial law in Beijing. Hundreds, possibly thousands, of protesters were killed by China's military on June 3 and 4, 1989, as communist leaders ordered an end to six weeks of unprecedented democracy protests in the heart of the Chinese capital. (CATHERINE HENRIETTE/AFP/Getty Images)


September 30, 2014

Hong Kong protesters refuse to leave

ผู้ประท้วงชาวฮ่องกงไม่ยอมถอย
www.boston.com

Protests in Hong Kong continue  after tens of thousands of people defied calls for them to dismantle their camps and return home. Demonstrations fanned out to more neighborhoods after police tried to disperse crowds using batons and tear gas early Monday morning. Riot police later withdrew. The pro-democracy protesters are angry at China for limiting their choice in Hong Kong's 2017 leadership elections. Demonstrators used umbrellas to protect themselves from tear gas overnight and to ward off the sweltering sun as they continued their sit-in throughout the day. That gave rise to the movement’s name—The Umbrella Revolution. --Thea Breite
การประท้วงในฮ่องกงยังคงดำเนินต่อ หลังจากมวลมหาประชาชนคนฮ่องกงที่ต้องการประชาธิปไตย ไม่ยอมกลับบ้าน  แต่กลับดาวกระจายไปหลายที่  หลังจากตำรวจใช้กระบอง และแกสน้ำตา  แต่ตำรวจเองนั่นแหละต้องถอย  ผู้ชุมนุมประท้วงไม่พอใจที่ทางการจีนมาจำกัดสิทธิในการเลือกตั้งของพวกเขา  โดยพากันใช้ร่มกำบังตัวเองจากแกสน้ำตา ... และเรียกการเคลื่อนไหวของพวกเขาซะเก๋ไก๋ว่า —The Umbrella Revolution การปฏิวัติร่ม  
Riot police fire tear gas on student protesters occupying streets surrounding the government headquarters in Hong Kong, early Monday, Sept. 29, 2014. (Wally Santana/AP)
ตำรวจปราบจราจล ยิงแก๊สน้ำตาเข้าใส่นักศึกษาทีประท้วงในถนน