Affichage des articles dont le libellé est “Glory to Hong Kong”. Afficher tous les articles
Affichage des articles dont le libellé est “Glory to Hong Kong”. Afficher tous les articles

lundi 16 septembre 2019

World's Most Creative Revolutionaries

100 days in: How Hong Kongers sustain protests with creativity
AFP
This picture taken on June 22, 2019 shows a man taking photographs of artwork and messages in support of protesters opposed to a China extradition law posted on the ‘Lennon Wall’ outside the government headquarters in Hong Kong. 

HONG KONG, Sept 16 — With Hong Kong shaken by 100 days of huge pro-democracy protests, activists have adopted a host of creative ways to fuel their movement away from the barricades.
From laser pen light shows, to flashmob singalongs and human chains, we look at some of the inventive methods embraced by a movement that shows no signs of abating.

1. Flashmob singalongs
Music has long played a prominent role in Hong Kong’s years of democracy rallies.
The tune that received the most traction early on in this summer’s protests was the catchy Christian hymn Sing Hallelujah to the Lord as well as Do you hear the people sing? from the musical Les Miserables.
But in the last fortnight a new anthem has been embraced with gusto.
“Glory to Hong Kong” was written by an anonymous composer and has gone viral, its defiant lyrics repeatedly belted out at protests, nightly flashmob concerts in city malls and even football matches.

2. Laser shows
Laser pointers were initially used by frontline protesters to indicate police positions, distract officers and stop people from taking photos or videos.
But they were adopted en masse after a student leader with 10 laser pens in his bag was arrested for possession of an offensive weapon.
Since then demonstrators have held “lightshows” outside of police stations and at most public gatherings, lending the protests a somewhat surreal disco-vibe once the sun sets.

3. Human chains
Human chains were first adopted in late August on the 30th anniversary of the Baltic Way, when more than a million people linked arms in huge anti-Soviet Union demonstrations.
The symbol caught on. 
Tens of thousands have taken part in human chains across the city in recent weeks, some formed on top of famous hills such as the Peak and Lion Rock. 
Secondary school students have also formed them each morning before classes.

4. Crowd-funding
Several online crowd-funding campaigns have been hugely successful.This picture taken on September 10, 2019 shows mooncakes, adorned with a popular slogan from recent pro-democracy protests, being prepared for the annual mid-autumn festival at a bakery in Hong Kong. 

Two campaigns raised over HK$21 million (RM11.3 million) to place adverts in major international newspapers.
“By placing ads internationally, we can break through the filter of the media and show the world the truth underneath the government propaganda,” a campaign co-organiser, who gave his name as Taylor, told AFP.
Other campaigns have raised money to build a four-metre-tall statue called “Lady Liberty Hong Kong” and to provide defence funds for the some 1,400 people arrested.

5. Lennon Walls
Plastered in colourful sticky-notes, posters and slogans, “Lennon Walls” have sprung up in more than a hundred locations across the city, often in pedestrian tunnels or near subway stations.
The first Hong Kong wall appeared during huge pro-democracy protests in 2014 and was a local take on a public graffiti wall in Prague that appeared after the 1980 murder of John Lennon.
When crowds of government supporters tore down a Lennon Wall outside the city’s parliament early on in this summer’s protests, democracy activists simply created new ones in their local neighbourhoods. 
Walls are still being torn down by opponents but they reappear within hours.

6. 10pm chanting
Hong Kongers have taken to shouting protest slogans from their apartments each night at 10pm, inspired by cacerolazos, a form of protest that emerged in authoritarian Chile during the 1970s and has since been adopted by multiple dissent movements.
In a city renowned for the highest concentration of skyscrapers in the world, the chanting is particularly effective, with popular slogans such as “Liberate Hong Kong, revolution now” and “No rioters, only tyranny” bouncing off buildings and echoing through neighbourhoods.

7. Mooncakes
Traditionally given during the mid-autumn festival, these dense pastries have been given a protest makeover. 
One bakery has sold tens of thousands of cakes which sport popular protest slogans on their crusts.

8. Protest art
Painting, calligraphy, comic strips, sculptures — Hong Kongers have been working around the clock to provide an artistic backdrop to their protests.
Much of the art is distributed in a highly modern fashion — shared on online forums or pinged to people’s phones using Bluetooth and Airdrop.
It is not unusual for someone’s phone to receive multiple digital flyers and posters each day, especially on the subway.
Soon the same artworks are printed and placed on the city’s Lennon Walls, which have become a constantly evolving canvas of dissent.

9. Flags
Small groups of protesters have waved the flags of Britain, colonial era Hong Kong and the United States.
But by far the most common flag is the “wilted bauhinia” — a twist on Hong Kong’s official flag, a white bauhinia flower on a red backdrop.
The new flag has turned the backdrop black, to reflect the mood of the streets, and the bauhinia flower is wilted and blood-stained.
Australian-based Chinese dissident artist Badiucao, who draws daily cartoons for the protest movement, has also created a flag of rainbow-coloured squares, meant to symbolise the Lennon Walls.
Another popular emblem directed at Beijing is dubbed “Chinazi” — a red flag with yellow stars in the shape of a swastika.


10. ‘Be water’
Inventiveness has been a core principle of the protests themselves with the phrase “Be water” commonly chanted.
The slogan references a philosophy of unpredictability espoused by local kung fu legend Bruce Lee and encourages protesters to keep mobile in a bid to stretch police resources and avoid mass arrests.
Protesters have also found creative ways to hold rallies that are banned, portraying them instead as opportunities to go window shopping, hold picnics or gather for religious meetings. 

jeudi 12 septembre 2019

“Glory to Hong Kong”: Protest anthem becomes new rallying cry for freedom in fight against erosion of democracy

Demonstrators and citizens gather in shopping malls to belt out anonymously written song denouncing tyranny
By Colin Drury

Hong Kong citizens sing protest karaoke at a city shopping mall 

It is a fight against the threat of oppression that has seen months of violence, transport shutdowns and mass demonstrations.
Now pro-democracy protestors in Hong Kong are hoping a new – and somewhat unorthodox – tactic will help win the fight against the perceived erosion of rights in the semi-autonomous Chinese territory.
Mass singalongs.
Thousands of citizens have spent three nights straight gathering peacefully in the city’s largest shopping centre to belt out a new protest anthem, “Glory to Hong Kong”.
The anonymously penned song celebrates the island territory’s much-cherished freedoms and vows its people will not surrender to tyranny.
Singing demonstrators, including families, students and senior citizens, have spent Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday crowded across every single floor of the New Town Plaza bursting into chorus, while local media report such outbreaks of song have also occurred at four other city shopping centres.





Police have been absent and the karaoke-style protests dispersed peacefully, the AP news agency reported.
Hong Kong’s long summer of protests was initially sparked in opposition to a bill which would have made it easier to extradite people to China – essentially allowing the Chinese government to target political opponents in the city.
But the demonstrations have since widened to demand an end to the ongoing erosion of the territory’s political freedoms – enshrined under the One Country Two Systems principle.
In particular, activists are concerned by Beijing’s growing influence over the city’s government, police, education system and media, and their demands now include calls for direct elections in the city and police accountability.
A mass new demonstration has been set for Sunday – although questions over whether it will go ahead have now been raised after police said the proposed route was banned.
Coordinator Bonnie Leung said authorities had told organisers, the Civil Human Rights Front, the protest march would not be allowed because it passed too close to police headquarters, government offices and several subway stations.
She said: “We create a safe zone for people to protest. Our marches are Hong Kong people giving a chance to the government to end the crisis peacefully but, now, they have closed the valve to release public anger. It’s like declaring war to peaceful protesters.”
She added she believed authorities were trying to provoke protesters to carry out illegal gatherings in an attempt to find an excuse to crack down and arrest people.