A few months <a href="https://www.pinterest.co.kr/jisuk5487/" target="_blank">³²ÀÚ·¹Çø®Ä«»çÀÌÆ®</a>=³²ÀÚ·¹Çø®Ä«»çÀÌÆ®
<br /> ago a Chinese official asked me if <a href="https://bkbi9ir312.tistory.com/137" target="_blank">´ëÁ¶µ¿Æ÷ÀåÀÌ»ç
</a><br /> I thought foreign powers were fomenting Hong Kong's social unrest.
"To get so many people to come <a href="https://lqoieohf73.tistory.com/134" target="_blank">°í¾ç¿ë´ÞÀÌ»ç</a><br /> to the
streets," he mused, "must take organisation, a big sum of money and political resources."
Since then, the protests sparked at the <a href="https://jjko9920.tistory.com/135" target="_blank">Áß¿ø±¸¿ë´ÞÀÌ»ç</a><br />
beginning of Hong Kong's hot summer have raged on through autumn and into winter.
The massive marches have continued, interspersed with increasingly violent pitched battles between smaller groups of more
militant protesters and the police.
The toll is measured in a stark <a href="https://www.trans24.kr" target="_blank">1Åæ¿ë´ÞÀÌ»ç</a><br /> ledger of police
figures that, even a short while ago, would have seemed impossible for one of the world's leading financial capitals and a
bastion of social stability.
More than 6,000 arrests, 16,000 tear-gas rounds, 10,000 rubber bullets.
As the sense of political crisis has deepened and divisions have hardened, China has continued to see the sinister hand of
foreign meddling behind every twist and turn. 85.203.21.136 |