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China's state-controlled media has completely ignored coverage of Hong Kong protests

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© ANTHONY WALLACE/AFP/Getty Images

Hong Kong made headlines on Monday as protesters stormed the streets and infiltrated the city's legislative building - with many residents making clear just how fed up they are with Chinese influence over the territory.

In China, however, dramatic imagery of the protests failed to make its way onto state-controlled media channels. Rather, there was no mention at all of Monday's protests - with the evening news broadcast instead showcasing the morning's flag-raising ceremony and a speech by Lam, according to the Associated Press, creating, in effect, a media blackout.

Monday's chaotic demonstrations are the latest in response to a controversial bill that would allow extraditions to mainland China. While Chief Executive Carrie Lam postponed debate on the bill, protesters argued that wasn't enough: their demands include Lam's resignation, complete withdrawal of the extradition bill, and an investigation into the police brutality that occurred during recent protests.

The takeover of the legislative building coincided with the 22nd anniversary of Hong Kong's handover from British to Chinese rule. Over two decades ago, in 1997, the British handed Hong Kong back to China under an agreement in which the territory could partly govern itself until 2047, when it will be absorbed into mainland China.

But, as Chinese President Xi Jinping puts forth increasingly authoritarian policies and tries to consolidate control over the territory, Hong Kong residents worry about the gradual chipping away of their civil rights and political and economic autonomy.

That anxiety showed full force on Monday as protesters, clad in yellow hard hats, plastic wrapped around their arms and legs, and face masks, shattered windows and tore down parts of the glass and metal exterior of the legislative building. After flooding the building, they removed portraits of pro-Beijing officials, sprayed the chamber walls with graffiti, and tried to hang a flag from the British colonial period over the city's special administrative region emblem.

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© Photo by Vernon Yuen/NurPhoto via Getty Images
The Washington Post

In response, and after three hours of occupying the building, hundreds of police, clad in riot gear, came out around midnight to disperse protesters, hurling several rounds of tear gas at them to clear the area. As of 1 a.m., hospital authority told the South China Morning Post that 54 people, including 38 men and 16 men, were being treated, with three in serious condition.

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© Photo by Billy H.C. Kwok/Getty Images

Over the last few weeks, Chinese media outlets have largely laid blame on foreign influence for inciting the demonstrations against the extradition bill.

But, even if there wasn't a media blackout, it's likely that Chinese attitudes toward Hong Kong wouldn't drastically change. As The New York Times Asia technology columnist Li Yuan noted, "it isn't a surprise that many people in China oppose the protests against a proposed law... they see only the news that Beijing's censors let them see." Among the educated Chinese she knows, Yuan said "a large number believe the protesters are wasting their time."

"Now Hong Kong has become a source of what many mainlanders fear most: instability," Yuan writes. "They don't see a fight over individual rights. They see ungrateful separatists and troublemakers. And they believe the Communist Party will get its way eventually."

https://www.msn.com/en-au/news/worl...hong-kong-protests/ar-AADHPsg?ocid=spartandhp
 
GOVERNMENT CONTROLLED MEDIA AND INTERNET BOTS
China governs with borderline facist iron fist.
 
Chinese Media vs Western Media
a Canadian expat lives in China sees Chinese media control
 
you are right master decides what is important :enjoy:
Your miserable excuse for a country is about to descend into civil war. Where you're going you'll beg for a master to decide what is and isn't important.
 
thugs?
important topics?
Yes. Do you have problems understanding the English language?
you're full of shit, i wonder if you know that.
I know I'm not. You, however, are full of the sh*t Western media feeds you on a daily basis. You're so used to it that you've stopped tasting it.
 
Spokesperson speaks on violent acts at HKSAR LegCo complex
Source: Xinhua| 2019-07-02 12:48:31|Editor: mingmei

BEIJING, July 2 (Xinhua) -- A spokesperson of the Hong Kong and Macao Affairs Office of the State Council spoke Tuesday of the violent acts of storming the Legislative Council (LegCo) Complex in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR).

The spokesperson expressed firm support for the HKSAR government and its police in handling the incident and investigating the criminal responsibility of violent offenders in accordance with the law.

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Oh wait --- we should follow the Western media model, right?

Blame Assad for chemical weapons attacks without proof. Convenient.

And let's not forget its finest moment --- the NYT article that strongly claimed that Iraq had WMD. We all know how that turned out.

Declassified CIA documents have pretty clearly revealed that the Deep State has a huge amount of influence over Western "free and fair" media. So perhaps members from Western countries can focus internally VS. give hypocritical lectures and judgment to countries thousands of miles away. Peace!
 
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