Selasa, 02 Juli 2019

Hong Kong's democracy movement was about hope. These protests are driven by desperation - CNN

It encapsulated the feeling of the protest and how far the mood has shifted since the optimism of the 2014 Umbrella Movement, when Hong Kong protesters were lauded worldwide for being peaceful and respectful. During those protests, there was a real sense that true change was possible, that the city's long demand of democracy was on the verge of being met.
When the Umbrella Movement failed, things began to turn.
Two years later, protesters clashed violently with police over an attempt to crack down on an open-air food market, in what became known as the "Mong Kok fish ball riot." The government responded with a barrage of prosecutions and ejected several pro-democracy lawmakers from the legislature.
A flag reading "If we burn, you burn with us," erected outside Hong Kong's legislature on July 1, 2019.
Last month, a bill that would allow extradition to China galvanized opposition from a wide swath of society and uncorked the anger and frustration that has been bubbling under the surface since 2014.
For weeks, hundreds of thousands of people have marched against the bill, leading to it being shelved though not formally withdrawn, while smaller -- but still substantial -- protests have clashed with police. Tear gas and rubber bullets were used to clear a major occupation on June 12, leading to allegations of police brutality and even angrier protests, several of which targeted the police headquarters and blocked officers inside.
A growing divide in the protest camp became clear Monday, as a peaceful pro-democracy march passed by the legislature where a splinter group of protesters was clashing with police and attempting to break in to the government headquarters.
With police nowhere in sight, the anger among the breakaway protest group exploded, as the mostly young, masked protesters smashed windows of the government building, forced their way inside through metal shutters and then trashed nearly everything in sight, including the legislative chamber.
"We hope the government will listen to the people," a masked protester said inside the chamber. "Return power to the people. This city, Hong Kong, belongs to her seven million citizens."
While protesters beat a tactical retreat late Monday -- some were forcibly carried out by fellow demonstrators who wanted to stay out of the building -- they promised they would return if their demands were not met.
This picture taken on July 1, 2019 shows protesters smashing glass doors and windows of the legislature in Hong Kong.

Desperation and destruction

Watching the chaos inside the legislature Monday were several grim-faced, pro-democracy lawmakers, who had earlier attempted to stop protesters storming the building, only to be shouted down and blamed for their previous failure to block the extradition bill.
"This is really not what we like to see," said pro-democracy Labour Party lawmaker Fernando Cheung.
He blamed the violence on the "lack of positive response to the public" after weeks of demonstrations and noted that Chief Executive Carrie Lam had refused to meet with opposition lawmakers ahead of Monday's protests.
"Lam has been hiding away for weeks, not even facing the media," he said. "In the meantime, we have had three young people who took their lives in desperation ... that really made young people desperate. They feel the lives of these comrades have been taken by the regime and they feel like they have some responsibility."
Images of three people whose suicides have been linked to the protests were everywhere Monday, and protesters have made them martyrs, often ignoring warnings about suicide contagion by doing so.
The mood among many protesters at the government headquarters -- all of whom wore masks but appeared to be in their mid-to-late teens and early twenties -- was often bleak.
"Hong Kong is not China yet," read one slogan spray painted inside the legislature, while another said: "There are no rioters, only a tyranny."
The fear for many is that the territory is turning into just another Chinese city. They worry that time is running out to shore up democratic reforms and political freedoms before the handover agreement that the British struck in 1997 expires in 2047 and Hong Kong truly becomes part of China.
Cheung, and the older pro-democrats, aren't in charge of channeling this fear and activism, nor are the generation of student leaders who came to prominence during the Umbrella Movement. Joshua Wong, released from prison at the height of protests last month, tried and failed to take some degree of control, but protesters have preferred to remain leaderless and fluid, adopting Bruce Lee's slogan: "Be like water."
While there are advantages to a leaderless model -- not least that there aren't obvious targets for prison sentences -- there are risks, too. With no one in charge, angry protests can quickly escalate without a plan for what comes next, as many protesters admitted was the case yesterday.
A policeman looks at the damage and debris after protesters stormed the legislature hours before in Hong Kong early on July 2, 2019.

Changing mood

Being a young Hong Konger isn't easy. Housing prices and living costs rise each year, while youth employment rates have been largely stagnant and many young graduates struggle to find work.
The younger generation also lacks many of the reasons for optimism that previous ones did. Many older Hong Kongers, who grew up in a British colony, strongly identify with China and saw a point of pride in the city returning to Chinese rule, even pro-democrats. Today, the number of people who express pride in being a Chinese citizen is at a record low, with a significant number of young people identifying as Hong Kongers rather than Chinese, according to the Hong Kong University Public Opinion Program.
This stronger sense of identity with the city and opposition to China, has created a generation of protesters for whom this really is an all or nothing fight. Their ties are not to country, but to city and each other, as seen when protesters returned to the legislature minutes before the police clearance to drag out some who wanted to stay and face the consequences, determined that all would share the same fate.
And if they're doomed to lose, many now appear intent on doing so with a fight.
"If we burn, you burn with us."

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https://www.cnn.com/2019/07/02/asia/hong-kong-protests-anger-intl/index.html

2019-07-02 06:29:00Z
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Trump: Iran 'playing with fire' with uranium enrichment - Aljazeera.com

Iran has announced on Monday it had amassed more low-enriched uranium than permitted under its 2015 nuclear deal with world powers, drawing a warning from US President Donald Trump that Tehran was "playing with fire".

Tehran's announcement marked its first major step beyond the terms of the pact since the United States pulled out of it more than a year ago. However, Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said the move was not a violation of the accord, arguing that Iran was exercising its right to respond to the US walkout.

The step, however, could have far-reaching consequences for diplomacy at a time when European countries are trying to pull the US and Iran back from confrontation. It comes less than two weeks after Trump said he ordered retaliatory air strikes on Iran, only to cancel them at the last minute. 

Iran's semi-official Fars news agency reported that the country's enriched uranium stockpile has now passed the 300kg limit allowed under the deal.

The UN nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), which monitors Iran's nuclear programme under the deal, confirmed in Vienna that Tehran had breached the limit.

Trump, asked if he had a message for Iran, said: "No message to Iran. They know what they're doing. They know what they're playing with, and I think they're playing with fire. So, no message to Iran whatsoever."

The White House said earlier it would continue to apply "maximum pressure" on Iran "until its leaders alter their course of action". It also said Iran should be held to a standard barring all uranium enrichment.

'We have NOT violated JCPOA'

However, there is no international standard prohibiting Iran from enriching uranium, said Daryl Kimball, executive director of the Arms Control Association. "That is not the case. That is an American position," he told Reuters news agency.

European powers, who remain party to the accord and have tried to keep it in place, urged Iran not to take further steps that would violate it. But they held off on declaring the agreement void or announcing sanctions of their own.

"We have NOT violated the #JCPOA," Zarif wrote on Twitter, referring to the deal by the acronym for its formal title, the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action.

He referred to a paragraph of the accord which contains the mechanism for countries to resolve disputes over compliance.

"As soon as E3 abide by their obligations, we'll reverse," he said, referring to European powers Britain, Germany and France. Iran has demanded they guarantee it the access to world trade envisioned under the deal.

The move is a test of European diplomacy after French, British and German officials had promised a strong diplomatic response if Iran fundamentally breached the deal.

The Europeans, who opposed last year's decision by Trump to abandon the agreement, had pleaded with Iran to keep within its parameters.

Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt said Britain wants to preserve the pact "because we don't want Iran to have nuclear weapons. But if Iran breaks that deal then we are out of it as well".

Iran has said it aims to keep the accord in place but cannot abide by its terms indefinitely, as long as sanctions imposed by Trump have deprived it of the benefits it was meant to receive in return for accepting curbs on its nuclear programme.

A spokesman for UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said that "such action by the Islamic Republic of Iran would not help preserve the plan, nor secure the tangible economic benefits for the Iranian people." He added that it should be resolved using the deal's mechanism. 

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Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the European countries should "stand behind their commitments" and impose sanctions on Iran.

'Economic war'

Iran said in May it would speed up its production of enriched uranium in response to the Trump administration sharply tightening sanctions against it that month. Washington has now effectively ordered all countries to halt purchases of Iranian oil or face sanctions of their own, which Tehran calls "economic war" designed to starve its population.

In the two months since the sanctions were tightened, the confrontation has taken on a military dimension, with Washington blaming Tehran for attacks on oil tankers and Iran shooting down a US drone, prompting the aborted US air strikes. Iran denies any involvement in the suspected oil tanker attacks.

The nuclear deal imposes limits both on how much enriched uranium Iran can hold and on how pure its stocks can be, thresholds intended to lengthen the "breakout period" - the time Tehran would need to build a nuclear bomb if it sought one.

Zarif said Iran's next move would be to enrich uranium beyond the maximum 3.67 percent fissile purity allowed under the deal, a threshold Tehran has previously said it would cross on July 7.

Iran's moves so far appear to be a calculated test of the deal's enforcement mechanisms and the diplomatic response.

"This is not an irreversible step the Iranians have taken. Iran, with the remaining partners, can decide how they're going to proceed. There is a process in the JCPOA to try to cure breaches," said Wendy Sherman, former President Barack Obama's lead US negotiator on the deal and now director of the Center for Public Leadership at the Harvard Kennedy School. 

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"This does not in and of itself reduce the breakout time period, which is essential here," she said.

Enriching uranium to a low level of 3.6 percent fissile material is the first step in a process that could eventually be used to produce the more highly enriched uranium that can be used to build a nuclear warhead. Iran has repeatedly denied it has any plans to build such a weapon.

Al Jazeera's Zein Basravi, reporting from Tehran, said it was a "very fragile time" for the 2015 nuclear deal, adding the breaching of the enriched uranium limit signalled a "significant moment".

"It is the first time we see something that we can point to and say that is a clear reduction of cooperation with the 2015 nuclear deal," Basravi said.

The Europeans have said they want to help Iran boost its economy. But so far, European efforts to do so have failed, with Iran shunned on oil markets and major foreign companies abandoning plans to invest for fear of falling foul of US rules.

'A lot of noise, but not a lot of action'

David Albright, a former UN nuclear inspector who consults with European officials on the Iran nuclear deal, told Reuters news agency that while the EU3 are angry that Iran has broken the 300kg ceiling, the violation is not serious enough for them to seek an immediate snapback of international sanctions.

They are watching, he said, for more serious breaches that could indicate that Iran is returning to the nuclear weapons development track that the CIA and the IAEA determined Tehran had abandoned in 2003. Iran denies it had such a programme.

"There will be a lot of noise, but not a lot of action on snapback," said Albright, president of the Institute for Science and International Security, a think-tank. 

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The confrontation has put the US in the position of demanding that the Europeans ensure Iranian compliance with an agreement that Washington itself has rejected. Trump has argued that the deal is too weak because some of its terms are not permanent, and because it does not cover non-nuclear issues such as Iran's ballistic missile programme and regional behaviour.

Washington has said sanctions are aimed at pushing Tehran back to the negotiating table. Iran said it cannot talk as long as Washington is ignoring the deal it signed.

Israel, which considers the Iranian nuclear programme an existential threat, has backed Trump's hard line, as have US allies, including several Gulf states, which consider Iran a foe and benefit from having its oil kept off markets.

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https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/07/trump-iran-playing-fire-uranium-enrichment-190701222356690.html

2019-07-02 06:02:00Z
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Senin, 01 Juli 2019

Watch live: Hong Kong protesters clash with police on anniversary of Chinese rule - NBC News

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LKtU2oINZeE

2019-07-01 16:26:53Z
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Hundreds of Hong Kong protesters storm government building over China extradition bill - CNN

Alan Hoo, vice chairman of the pro-Beijing Liberal Party, said the Hong Kong community would not be happy with protesters' actions today.

Anyone who has lived and worked in Hong Kong will not expect the scenes we have seen today," he said.

Hoo added that protesters' demands had been met, the extradition bill had been suspended and that there was no need to storm the seat of the government.

There is no doubt what they're saying has been well listened to. You must be deaf and blind to (not) see what's ... going on," he said.

He said the police had "made a point today" by leaving protesters to take the building.

"They said, 'Okay come in' and what happened? They trashed the Legislative Chamber. This is not a protest movement. This is vandalism," he said.

"The breakdown of law and order is the critical point you've reached today ... The world is watching and this is not a peaceful protest."

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https://www.cnn.com/asia/live-news/hong-kong-july-1-protests-intl-hnk/index.html

2019-07-01 16:12:00Z
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Hundreds of Hong Kong protesters storm government building over China extradition bill - CNN

They've been overshadowed by the chaos at the government headquarters this evening, but an estimated 550,000 people took part in the peaceful pro-democracy march today.

That figure comes from the organizers of the July 1 march, the Civil Human Rights Front.

It marks a huge surge in year-on-year attendance, and is more than 10 times the 50,000 people estimated to have marched on July 1, 2018.

Police, however, said an estimated 190,000 people took part in today's march.

Images from the protest showed young and old people marching side-by-side. Some parents even brought along their young children.

Among the chants used by protesters were "(Chief Executive) Carrie Lam, step down!" and "Free Hong Kong."

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https://www.cnn.com/asia/live-news/hong-kong-july-1-protests-intl-hnk/index.html

2019-07-01 15:13:00Z
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Hundreds of Hong Kong protesters storm government building over China extradition bill - CNN

Protesters are vandalizing the heart of the Hong Kong's government, tearing portraits off the walls and spraying painting slogans on the walls and furniture.

In the main lobby of the Legislative Council, demonstrators have written on the wall: "HK Gov f**king disgrace" in English.

Underneath, in Cantonese it says: "Release the martyrs."

Meanwhile, other protesters are tearing the building's furniture apart, destroying computers and ripping down displays.

Never in the recent history of Hong Kong protests have demonstrators been so actively destructive or angry.

CNN/James Griffiths
CNN/James Griffiths

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https://www.cnn.com/asia/live-news/hong-kong-july-1-protests-intl-hnk/index.html

2019-07-01 14:44:00Z
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Hong Kong protesters attack government building over China extradition bill - CNN

Tensions are growing outside the Hong Kong government headquarters, known as the Legislative Council (LegCo), where protesters have smashed multiple windows and torn down barriers, so far without any reaction from police.

Several thousand protesters are packed into the demonstration zone outside LegCo’s public entrances, wearing helmets and masks. Their arms are wrapped in cling film to protect them from pepper spray.

There is little to no leadership and only spontaneous coordination. That's led to confusion about how and when protesters should break in to LegCo ... and what they’ll do even if they can get inside.

The protesters are all very young and very aware of the risks they are taking, hiding their faces and blocking reporters from taking photos. Some have even demand that images be deleted if they fear someone has been compromised.

As the sun starts to go down here, the feeling is that we’re headed for an ugly, violent night.

Police patience cannot last forever and official statements suggests it’s almost run out. Protesters, meanwhile, are determined to stay on, even if that means fighting.

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https://www.cnn.com/asia/live-news/hong-kong-july-1-protests-intl-hnk/index.html

2019-07-01 13:05:00Z
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