Placeholder Image

字幕列表 影片播放

  • This is me in the middle of crossing one of the weirdest borders I've ever crossed.

  • It's this one.

  • It divides China from China.

  • And it took me two hours to

  • get through.

  • This border is weird not only because it separates the same

  • country into two, but also because it has an expiration date: July 1st 2047.

  • Until then China has promised to stay out, to let

  • Hong Kong be highly autonomous.

  • Hence, the border.

  • But the government of China

  • doesn't really want to wait until 2047. They're ready to start erasing this

  • border now, making Hong Kong a proper part of China and one of the ways

  • they're doing that is this huge bridge.

  • Yeah, I know this isn't really the best

  • shot so here's a solution.

  • The drone doesn't even have a microphone, but even

  • still I couldn't help but say, "take a look at this bridge" as it was flying away.

  • But seriously, take a look at this bridge.

  • China has unveiled the world's

  • largest sea crossing bridge.

  • It's 55 kilometers, that's 34 miles, it's the

  • longest sea crossing in the world.

  • The bridge connects Hong Kong with Macau and

  • mainland China.

  • I always call this some sort of an umbilical cord between

  • Hong Kong and China.

  • That we want something physical for you to register

  • in your head that Hong Kong is part of China.

  • So this bridge and a bunch of other recent developments in Hong Kong are

  • bringing up a lot of questions of what is Hong Kong?

  • Who does it really belong to?

  • And what happens when you erase a border?

  • it's June 4th which is the anniversary of the Tiananmen Square massacre.

  • There are hundreds of thousands of people here in Tiananmen Square.

  • In the history of

  • communist China there has never been anything like this.

  • On June 4th, 1989,

  • pro-democracy protesters were marching on Beijing's Tiananmen Square calling

  • for the end of a single-party rule in China.

  • They were then brutally massacred,

  • hundreds were killed.

  • "The troops have been firing indiscriminately."

  • Marking the end of any sort of widespread democracy

  • movement in China.

  • They've just turned off all the lights in this park.

  • Every year the residents of Hong Kong hold a vigil to commemorate the people killed

  • in that massacre.

  • This is something that's not allowed to mainland China, but

  • in recent years this vigil has become more personal to these people and that's

  • because they are feeling a new level of influence from China.

  • But wait. Isn't hong Kong

  • already a part of China?

  • Technically yes, Hong Kong belongs to China but you

  • sure wouldn't think so by looking at this border that I'm at right now.

  • Okay, I made it into China.

  • I mean technically I was already in China, but

  • now I'm like, really, in China.

  • So how did it get like this?

  • Britain and China fought a couple of wars over trade

  • in the 1800s and Britain eventually took over Hong Kong as a colony.

  • At the time

  • this was a mainly empty rocky, group of islands in southern China. Under British rule,

  • Hong Kong's population and economy exploded and even though Hong Kong's

  • population was mainly made up of immigrants from China, it became a very

  • different society than mainland China which was undergoing a communist

  • revolution.

  • One of the treaties that China and Britain signed said that Hong Kong

  • would be a British colony for 99 years, which meant that the agreement

  • would officially expire in 1997.

  • As that expiration date drew nearer, China and

  • Great Britain started to talk about what this is gonna look like.

  • Britain acknowledges that when the lease runs out in 1997 on most of the territory, the

  • whole of Hong Kong will revert to China.

  • Let's finish talking about this stuff up there.

  • If you go up to the 69th floor in this building in the Chinese border city

  • of Shenzhen, you'll find a life-size wax sculpture of this moment in the mid '80s

  • when the leaders from China and Great Britain sat around and negotiated the

  • terms of handing over Hong Kong to China.

  • And they came to this agreement that

  • Britain would give over Hong Kong peacefully to China, under the condition

  • that Hong Kong would be able to retain its way of life, legal system, their

  • economic system, freedom of speech freedom of press, freedom of association,

  • these are fundamental freedoms.

  • Freedom of religious worship, these are fundamental freedoms.

  • And they must continue.

  • China agreed.

  • They said they would let them be

  • independent and govern themselves for 50 years while they kind of adjusted to

  • Chinese rule.

  • 50 years beyond 1997. And so this was the agreement that they came to.

  • It was called the "One country, two systems" model and it was kind of unprecedented.

  • Okay, let's head back to Hong Kong see ya Margaret, see ya Deng.

  • So even after Hong Kong was handed back to China in 1997, this border that I'm now biking to

  • stuck around.

  • It remained exactly how it was and this border became highly

  • symbolic of the fact that

  • yes, this is China, but it was kind of its own country

  • at the same time.

  • Governed with its own values and its own system that is

  • different than China, that is in opposition to China in some ways.

  • Perhaps the most overt symbol of Chinese sovereignty is this army barracks behind

  • me. It's the Chinese army.

  • And so even though these soldiers can't leave the

  • barracks or do any sort of enforcement activities within Hong Kong, they're

  • still here in the central area of the city and they serve as a very powerful

  • symbol of the fact that this is Chinese territory, this is Chinese sovereignty.

  • But these soldiers won't be confined for much longer.

  • The borders around their barracks, as well as this border of north, are quickly

  • dissolving.

  • China has committed to respect Hong Kong's autonomy until 2047

  • and for the first decade after the handover, they respected that promise.

  • What you have to understand is that Hong Kong was easily China's most

  • economically productive city.

  • In the early

  • '90s right before the handover, this

  • one city's economy was more than a quarter of the size of China's entire

  • economy and so it makes sense why China would agree to these terms, to keep Hong

  • Kong happy and economically free.

  • But then things changed.

  • Look at the

  • explosive development of these Chinese cities in recent years.

  • These are China's

  • mega cities.

  • These cities eventually eclipsed Hong Kong as the economic

  • powerhouse of China.

  • Shenzhen, this town that shares the border with Hong Kong, is

  • a perfect example of this.

  • The place went from a small fishing village of around

  • 30,000 people to a super productive economic powerhouse of over 10 million

  • people in just a few decades.

  • Hong Kong went from making up 27% of Chinese GDP in the early '90s down to

  • just 3% today.

  • And suddenly Hong Kong, once the

  • economic powerhouse of China and the gateway to the West, became much less

  • economically relevant.

  • And soon the Chinese government didn't have the same

  • incentives to respect Hong Kong's autonomy.

  • So now you begin to see a flood

  • of Chinese influence in this city.

  • Let's go see if we can catch the 5 o'clock news.

  • In recent years the evening news broadcast has started with the national

  • anthem of China,

  • playing under a promo video that shows Hong Kongers

  • enthusiastically participating in traditional Chinese customs.

  • The message

  • is very clear: that Hong Kong is a part of China whether they like it or not.

  • On top of that, the language of the evening news is Mandarin, the official language

  • of China.

  • But in Hong Kong they don't speak Mandarin, they speak Cantonese.

  • Don't they say if you want to kill a city you kill its language first.

  • And we speak

  • Cantonese here.

  • They're actually some professors in Hong Kong and China

  • telling us that "Oh, Cantonese is actually not our mother tongue,

  • not Hong Kong's mother tongue."

  • Cantonese is actually just a dialect of Chinese.

  • The Chinese government tried to get teachers to use this text

  • book to teach Hong Kong children the basics about China, but looking into the

  • book you see that it's more of an advertisement for China's style of

  • government, than an introduction to it.

  • The Chinese system is the ideal type.

  • So multi-party rivalry will makes the people suffer, because about... all these

  • four points are about how bad the United States is.

  • Multi-party systems create

  • government shutdowns. They're basically pointing to that as the reason why a

  • multi-party system like that of the United States is deeply flawed and

  • really bad for the people.

  • In 2014 China took it one step too far.

  • The Chinese government was trying to control who could run for Hong Kong's election,

  • in an effort to secure a pro-China candidate.

  • This really touched a nerve

  • for the locals because this was their democratic process, something that China

  • promised they would stay out of.

  • So people immediately took to the streets

  • in protest starting here in this park.

  • I took the taxi from my home to here on the night.

  • What was it like down here that night?

  • We were in a standoffish situation.

  • And suddenly they used tear gas.

  • The first drop of tear gas just dropped

  • right in front of my eyes.

  • We were holding umbrellas,

  • trying to prevent

  • pepper sprays.

  • I remember that, like, itchy painful feeling.

  • Oh my gosh. Yeah.

  • I saw Hong Kong people joining, uniting together against

  • the central governments and fighting for their rights.

  • This protest and the

  • subsequent movement that came up around it is known as the "Umbrella Movement."

  • You would say, "Oh, what's the point of fighting when you're bound to lose? They're

  • so big, you're so small."

  • For the record, we need to fight.

  • We're not taking things

  • lying down.

  • The protest didn't change the Chinese government's mind and it didn't

  • immediately change anything in Hong Kong,

  • but this spectacle of young people

  • rising up to defend their rights from the central government of China did

  • spark a political awakening among the many in the city who had never before

  • paid attention.

  • I think post-Umbrella Movement was the first time that the middle class came out and voted in droves.

  • And voted for the opposition force.

  • But for the first time like, you know, people sort of like us all started caring.

  • Look at this graph that shows how Hong Kongers

  • identify themselves, either as Chinese or Hong Konger.

  • In the early days after the

  • hand-off, as China respected the One party two systems arrangement, you can

  • see how Hong Kongers slowly became more and more comfortable identifying

  • themselves as Chinese.

  • But since then, with the growing influence from the

  • Chinese government, you can see this line reverse course.

  • Residents of Hong Kong

  • who identify themselves as Chinese has almost hit a new all-time low.

  • The Umbrella Movement is a manifestation of this growing Hong Kong

  • identity and the resistance to Chinese government influence.

  • China responded to the Umbrella Movement with a new wave of efforts to exert influence

  • in this city.

  • I'm standing outside the bookstore where in 2015

  • five staff members disappeared throughout the year. This bookstore was

  • selling books that were banned in China, that basically cover the sex lives and

  • the corruption scandals of high-ranking Chinese officials and so one by one

  • throughout 2015, people who worked in this bookstore disappeared.

  • No one really knows where they went. One of them showed up a bit later on Chinese

  • television apologizing for what he did.

  • And confessing to his crimes.

  • The book store has since closed down.

  • Back here in Victoria Park these candleholders stand as a symbol of the

  • fight for democracy against China's single party rule.

  • That was once a fight

  • that happened far away in Beijing, but as this border has slowly been erased these

  • people now find themselves engaged in that same fight.

  • Resisting a much more

  • powerful China in the struggle for their own democracy and identity.

This is me in the middle of crossing one of the weirdest borders I've ever crossed.

字幕與單字

單字即點即查 點擊單字可以查詢單字解釋

B1 中級 美國腔

中國正在抹去與香港的邊界 (China is erasing its border with Hong Kong)

  • 339 26
    Makoto 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
影片單字