New Year’s Day White Elephant March

https://bcmagazine.smugmug.com/Bcene-photos/2016/New-Years-Day-March-1-January/i-gS9Hrz6

Thousands of individuals and groups marched on New Year’s Day to protest the squandering of Hong Kong’s financial reserves on white elephant and vanity projects that fill the 1%’s bank accounts while doing little or nothing to improve the quality of life for rank and file HongKongers.
Click on any image for the full gallery.

https://bcmagazine.smugmug.com/Bcene-photos/2016/New-Years-Day-March-1-January/i-Xw7sgq6

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https://bcmagazine.smugmug.com/Bcene-photos/2016/New-Years-Day-March-1-January/i-kRPnTbf

Michelle Wong – The Wave of Umbrellas: Occupy Protests in Hong Kong

The protest in Hong Kong is in its third week and clashes between the people themselves are beginning to unfold. Anti-Occupy groups are beginning to self-organise themselves against Occupy protesters, hiring trucks and lorries to dismember makeshift barricades that have been blocking traffic off some of Hong Kong’s major thoroughfares on the Island. The development of events and interaction between government and protesters are totally unpredictable. Negotiation talks that were announced to take place on 10 October were called off suddenly; everyday is rumoured to be a deadline for police clearance of the Occupy sites. And every night protesters stay on the streets till the sun dawns the next day.

The experience of the protests is immediate. The barricades so far have come in no standardised form, and because of them there is so much more space in the city. On 26 September, before we erected the barricades, I saw the crowd overflowing from Admiralty Centre into Harcourt Road. I am in the crowd flooding out from Fenwick Pier Street as the traffic seemed to voluntarily halt. I looked to my left as I walked westward on the eastbound lane of Gloucester Road alongside people whom I had never met and faces I cannot recall. I looked to the right into the Government Headquarters plaza and saw more faces I cannot recall. A ribbon of blue uniforms kept the three crowds apart. Roads that I rarely took, I now roam. I felt the heat swelling up in the asphalt as I sat on the road in midday; I felt the road contracting and cooling as I stretched my legs during sundown.

The experience of the protests is mediated. Social media has been the most powerful tool of communication and diverse news source at the moment. Rumours too fly through the ether, including manipulated images of the People’s Liberation Army advancing into town. And the head of the city speaks only through pre-recorded videos and interviews. At 23:34, on 28 September, the protesters flew out a drone from the bridge in Admiralty. I am on the ground and I look up into a negative landscape of the sky, at cutouts of the night amidst the buildings that surrounded me. And I am also in the skies as I look down upon a sea of black dots, my fellow people occupying the streets, alleyways, and roads that we never thought of standing in shoulder to shoulder. As I look into the screen, onto a back-lit surface on which we swipe our fingers to sift through not only images and text, but also information, knowledge, and emotions. An announcement scrolled across the television screen on that same night read “Fireworks for National Day celebration cancelled.”

On 3 October, some brought chalk with them and wrote on the ground “I am here today because”. What ensued was a whole section of the lane filling up with lines after lines of writing in chalk, of people telling the world why they were there that day and every day. Some of us found an open spot on the bridge amongst the crowd and perched there for fresh air. You asked me if I see myself as an activist. I replied I am not sure if I would call myself one. But I think, I know, and I believe, that the life and practice I have chosen to live and breathe, is a choice to hope that we can live differently and more justly. I do not know if we can live differently and more justly, but I think I would choose to hope so. And if hope is fleeting, like our friends from Tahrir Square cautioned, I am determined to live differently and more justly and demand the impossible. Just 3 nights before, we opened and closed our umbrellas rhythmically and cheered. It had just past midnight, it was 1 October, and though there were no fireworks, with umbrellas we counted down to the National Day.

A few days later I went back to that bridge where I had stood, looking for this one signage that I did not capture then. I was stopped by a young fellow protester who was no older than 16, who denied me access to the footbridge where the sign was because I did not have a staff pass to the building that the bridge led to. Protesters were restricting access to the bridge in fear of police clearance. But I got through to photograph the sign in the end. It read:
“During the 1989 student movement, there was a time when it was like a carnival in Tiananmen Square. The students and citizens were dancing and singing together, thinking that their resistance would win because of the huge masses. No one could imagine what happened afterwards. Do not forget why you are here, stay strong and determined.”

In another historical moment and in another place some 73 years ago, a poet had written to his people some verses in Urdu that feel like ours. I think they beckon us too, today.

Speak, your lips are free.
Speak, it is your own tongue.
Speak, it is your own body.
Speak, your life is still yours.

See how in the blacksmith’s shop
The flame burns wild, the iron glows red;
The locks open their jaws,
And every chain begins to break.

Speak, this brief hour is long enough
Before the death of body and tongue:
Speak, ’cause the truth is not dead yet,
Speak, speak, whatever you must speak.

“Bol” (Speak) by Faiz Ahmed Faiz, published in ‘Naqsh-e-Feryadi’, 1941.

Originally published here http://www.inmediahk.net/node/1027625

Occupy Central: Admiralty

http://bcmagazine.smugmug.com/Bcene-photos/2014/Occupy-Central-28-September/44617943_tmszPJ#!i=3570128906&k=8SLQm75

Away from the confrontations at Legco, Admiralty and Wanchai are chock full of demonstrators with Queensway, Hennessy Road, Lockhart Road all blocked and pedestrian only.

The police give every impression of being completely out-thought and having hopelessly under-estimated a well-prepared and organised protest who have effortless isolated Central.

http://bcmagazine.smugmug.com/Bcene-photos/2014/Occupy-Central-28-September/44617943_tmszPJ#!i=3570090244&k=4gRZL4S

This protest is not going away until the organisers call it off – the police simply do not have man-power to deal with all the locations blocked.

Will the government put the PLA on the streets…

http://bcmagazine.smugmug.com/Bcene-photos/2014/Occupy-Central-28-September/44617943_tmszPJ#!i=3570101785&k=3vMJZs3

Video and photos of the street blockades. http://bcmagazine.smugmug.com/Bcene-photos/2014/Occupy-Central-28-September

Tear Gas – Hong Kong

Shortly before 6pm on the 28 September 2014, and without warning the Hong Kong Police attacked the people they are sworn to serve with tear gas… there was no reason for such an aggressive escalation of force during a peaceful protest.

After several volleys of tear gas, the police called in the shotgun wielding Police Tactical Unit, garbed in military green fatigues it was tragic for Hong Kong to see the PTU point guns at un-armed civilians with their hands in the air as their colleagues appeared to fire tear gas rounds directly at protestors.

Earlier in day the police had been using batons and pepper spray against groups of protestors close to the police barrier cordoning off the government offices.

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Click on any photo for more images and video

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images and video copyright bc magazine / Simon Durrant

Occupy Central has formally begun…

OCLPHK

Press Release from OCLPHK:
September 28 01.00, Occupy Central with Love and Peace (OCLPHK) formally announced the start of “Occupy Central” and issued the two following requests on political reform: Withdraw the decision, restart the political reform process”.

The two nights of occupation of Civic Square in Admiralty have completely embodied the awakening of Hong Kong people’s desire to decide their own lives. The courage of the students and members of the public in their spontaneous decision stay has touched many Hong Kong people. Yet, the government has remained unmoved. As the wheel of time has reached this point, we have decided to arise and act.

The Occupy movement will continue the current occupation, using the occupation of the Central Government Office as a starting point. Personnel and materials to support Occupy Central will enter the site. We call on all supporters of OCLP to come to the Central Government Office and to join this act of civil disobedience.

OCLP has two demands:

  1. The immediate withdrawal of the NPCSC’s decision on the framework for Hong Kong’s political reform
  2. The swift resumption of the political reform consultation. The Leung Chun-ying administration has failed in the political reform process. We demand Leung re-submits a new political reform report to the central government which fully reflects the Hong Kong people’s aspirations for democracy. If Leung refuses to respond, the action will escalate.

OCLP has undergone a year and a half of deliberations and dialogue with different sectors and the gathering of public opinion through deliberation sessions and the civil referendum.

We reiterate we will stand firm in our belief in peace and non-violence. We urge Hong Kong people to respond to the call of history, to stand up and have the courage to be a real Hong Kong citizen.

www.oclp.hk

OCLP Secretariat

http://www.oclp.hk/