Quite a number of teenagers get involved in the campaign of anti-extradition law. Why are they so devoted and what they have experienced in the past month?
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One year has passed since the 8.31 incident. Two students injured in Prince Edward station that night spoke about their experience and the challenges they had faced over the past year.
In the summer of 2019, the anti-extradition law rally evolved into city-wide movement. A group of young protesters took to the street and fought for their demands. When the long vacation of summer holiday comes to an end, are they prepared to put down their protective gear?
Source:
https://youtu.be/_GU_z4K627I
"The police have been accused of mishandling Yuen Long's attack on 21 July. Stephen Lo, the Commissioner of Police, explained that the ""delay"" was due to insufficient manpower as the force was busy dealing with a protest in Hong Kong Island, as well as three cases of fight and one case of fire in the Yuen Long district.
Hong Kong Connection's reporters have collected the CCTV footage dated 21 July from different cameras and interviewed relevant persons to reconstruct the attack's timeline and take a closer look at the police's arrangement during Yuen Long's ""nightmare""."
Source:
https://youtu.be/zpkFRsSo30o
The National People’s Congress almost unanimously passed the Hong Kong national security law. Beijing said the law would only target a very tiny minority. How would this “tiny minority of 7 million people” cope with the tempest?
Source: https://youtu.be/cxMug6lb3xA
Amid the protracted anti-extradition bill protests has emerged a plethora of online Information. Fact checking became a shared memory this summer. But the gap is increasingly widening between the "truth" in the eyes of "yellow ribbons” and "blue ribbons". In this episode, we enter the information world of the yellows and blues to examine how the two differ.
Source:
https://youtu.be/m3nOOVODqyQ
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Twelve Hong Kong people on bail attempted to flee to Taiwan by speedboat were arrested by the Mainland Coast Guard and have been detained in Yantian District Detention Centre in Shenzhen for over 60 days. Their families have been doing everything they can, to make sure that the detainees’ legal rights are being respected while they are being held in custody. They voiced their inner desperate struggles in the interviews.
For many years, the government promoted social communion but a chasm persisted between HK people and ethnic minorities. In mid-October, on the eve of the Kowloon March, the Civil Human Rights Front convener was assaulted. Live news broadcasts immediately alleged the assailants were South Asians. Participants in online discussion forums promptly suggested a revenge attack on Chungking Mansions where many ethnic minorities reside. Ethnic minority leaders Jeffrey and KK, born and bred in HK, decided to try to reverse the situation, with results beyond expectations. They described it as a new “we connect” page, of ethnic minorities being accepted as HK people.
Source: https://youtu.be/-wGWbnij-6c