ä ³Î
µ¿È£È¸
³«¼Àå
À½ ¾Ç
´ëȹæ
»ö»óÇ¥
STUDY
ÇØ¿ì¼Ò
°Ô½ÃÆÇ
ÁÖ¹®Á¶È¸
Àå¹Ù±¸´Ï
ÀÌ¿ë¾È³»
±Û ¼öÁ¤ Çϱâ
ÀÛ¼ºÀÚ¸í
E-mail
Homepage
±Û Á¦¸ñ
º» ¹®
Three days after
½ÑÀÌ»ç
the march, with Hong Kong's leader, Chief Executive
½Ö¹®µ¿Æ÷ÀåÀÌ»ç
Carrie Lam, insisting she would not back down, thousands of people surrounded the Legislative Council building where the bill was being debated. It was on the same spot just outside the
È«Äá¸íÇ°½Ã°è
=È«Äá¸íÇ°½Ã°è
chamber, less than five years earlier, that a phalanx of trucks with mechanical grabbers had begun scooping up rows
¹ß·»Æ¼³ë¿©¼ºÀÇ·ù
=¹ß·»Æ¼³ë¿©¼ºÀÇ·ù
of abandoned tents. To the sound of the snapping
ÀÌ»ñÁü¼¾ÅÍ°¡°Ý
of poles and the crunching of bamboo barricades - the detritus of weeks of protest and occupation - 2014's pro-democracy demonstrations finally ran out of steam. Now the proposed law, one that may once have been seen as relatively inconsequential, was about to reignite the movement.
ºñ¹Ð¹øÈ£