主题:【新闻关注】中国首次并用陆海空赴利比亚撤侨 -- 葡萄
我就在上海,窗口就可以看到人民广场,天天太平得很,就两破人,天天YY别人革命,自己看热闹。有本事自己上啊,扯大旗啊,大家还也可以去围观围观,多喜乐啊。
另外,南亚果然是世界劳工输出地。看看孟加拉和印度加一起多少人。也知道南亚人在穆斯林和非洲的传统的经济中的参与度
Video
China police prevent demonstrations
Large numbers of police - and new tactics like shrill whistles and street cleaning trucks - squelched overt protests in China for a second Sunday after more calls for peaceful gatherings modeled on recent movements in the Middle East. (Feb. 27)
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By Keith B. Richburg
Washington Post Foreign Service
Monday, February 28, 2011; 1:33 AM
BEIJING - Police and security officials displayed a show of force here and in other Chinese cities Sunday, trying to snuff out any hint of protests modeled on the uprisings in the Middle East and North Africa. In Shanghai, several hundred people trying to gather were dispersed with a water truck.
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Premier Wen Jiabao, meanwhile, used a morning Internet chat to promise to purge senior officials who are corrupt and to rein in inflation and rising home prices, directly addressing some of the most common grievances of ordinary Chinese.
Since a January uprising in Tunisia spurred similar anti-government protests across the Arab world, threatening long-entrenched authoritarian regimes, China's Communist rulers have reacted nervously, with both defensive and aggressive tactics.
Officials have used state-run media outlets to dismiss any comparisons of those regimes with China. At the same time, they have stepped up public comments on the need to address "social conflict" and to tackle problems such as the growing income disparity between the rich and poor. They also have detained a number of activists and human rights lawyers and blocked Internet search terms considered sensitive, such as "Egypt," "Tunisia" and even U.S. Ambassador Jon Huntsman Jr.'s Chinese name. And they have issued warnings to foreign journalists to be mindful of reporting restrictions.
A previously unknown group has used an overseas-based Chinese-language Web site to call for a series of peaceful, silent protests - named "jasmine rallies" after the Tunisian uprising - on consecutive Sunday afternoons in cities across China. The rallies were called for heavily trafficked commercial areas, public squares and parks, ostensibly so silent protesters could blend in with ordinary passersby to avoid arrest.
However, police on Sunday were out in huge numbers in Beijing, Shanghai and other cities at the sites where the rallies were supposed to take place. Blue-uniformed police officers and security volunteers with red armbands lined the streets in Beijing's Wangfujing area. The bustling commercial street, with a McDonald's and a Gap store, is close to the Forbidden City and Tiananmen Square, the site where hundreds of Chinese pro-democracy demonstrators were killed in 1989 when tanks rolled in to quash a six-week student-led protest. On Sunday, policemen patrolled with German shepherds and a water truck normally used for street cleaning traversed back and forth.
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Police in Beijing stopped some foreigners and asked for identification, turning away journalists from entering the area. At 2:30 p.m., about a half-hour after the scheduled start of the silent protest walk, officers blocked off the entrance to Wangfujing Street with police tape. The unusually heavy police presence attracted curious onlookers, who snapped pictures with cellphone cameras. At Wangfujing, a foreign journalist shooting video for a news agency was reportedly punched and kicked in the face by plainclothes Chinese security officers who confiscated his camera. The Foreign Correspondents Club of China reported that more than a dozen other journalists were roughed up at the site.
At the Peace Cinema in Shanghai, opposite the People's Square near the city's main municipal building, a few hundred people tried to gather. Policemen used whistles and loudspeakers to keep the crowd moving, and police converged whenever a group of more than a dozen people appeared to be forming. A street-cleaning vehicle spraying bursts of water also kept crowds at bay.
Some people in Shanghai said they heard about the "jasmine rally" and came to see if there would be any public speaker. Some openly complained about government corruption and the need for an opening of the system.
"I came here today to see how people protest against the government, which is corrupt and rules in an authoritarian way," said a 71-year-old man who asked that only his family name, Cao, be used. "Democracy is the trend in the world. No country in the world can be an exception to the process."
Cao said the Communist Party in China was so strong that he expected reform would have to come from within the system.
"For those fighting against the government, it is like eggs hitting the stone," Cao said. "With 10, 100, 1,000 and 10,000 eggs hitting the stone, the eggs will eventually succeed."
送花。注:送花、宝推可能得宝 关闭
送花成功,可取消。有效送花赞扬。
参数变化,作者,声望:1;铢钱:0。你,乐善:1;铢钱:-1。本帖花:1
如果要说不情愿,那得说我本来想投弃权票或反对票。
http://news.wenxuecity.com/messages/201102/news-gb2312-1291865.html
底线与准则,不是给人笑话死掉。他那意思可能是讲我们是综合考虑到了各方面的情况与因素,是负责任的举动。
本帖一共被 1 帖 引用 (帖内工具实现)
酷爱网购YY的某人泪奔……
一位上海网民报道说,27日下午上海声势很大,围观集会的人数至少是上次的十几二十倍。
他说,在汉口路教堂前面一段路一度聚集一两千人,一有抓人行动或其他动静人群就开始起哄骚动,警察哨声和人群起哄乱成一片。
警察制止民众拍照,这位网民说他在对面马路拍照时被警察看到,两个警察把他拖带到一旁,要求必须删除。
警察还说,“一群无聊的人没事找事,你若继续参与就把你带到警局去”。
这是所谓上面网站的原文,正如这个警察说的:"一群无聊的人没事找事".
有几张照片,也没看到有几个无聊的人在哪里没事找事,也没有旗子、没有标语、没有焚烧、没有石头、没有番茄、没有鸡蛋。什么也没有。围观的观众到有很多,这没办法,中国人(上海人)就喜欢看热闹,两个人当街吵架都能围个水泄不通。上面也说了,围观的人多了10几倍,有猴子看,还是免费的,谁不看啊,可惜猴子不上劲,没胆量来耍啊。
在上海,就这种没胆量,没骨气,没纲领,没目标、没领袖,没献身精神的人还想闹起来,还真不是小看他们,而是彻底看不起他们。