[ Slow TV Tour ] Night Tram in Hong Kong 黑夜電車 Kennedy Town - Causeway Bay 堅尼地城 - 銅鑼灣 4K

Описание к видео [ Slow TV Tour ] Night Tram in Hong Kong 黑夜電車 Kennedy Town - Causeway Bay 堅尼地城 - 銅鑼灣 4K

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Double-decker Tram Real-Time and Sound Trip at Night
*Turn on the subtitle for the name of stations
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Hi all, this is Hang, a Hong Kong Based Youtube Channel! I would like to travel around Hong Kong, bringing you to see and hear this city through my video.
Keywords: Slow TV, Slow Walk, Road trip, Road Tour, Long Take, Sound Walk, Relaxing, Urban Video...
Enjoy!
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From Kennedy Town to Causeway Bay:
Kennedy Town Terminus
Davis Street
North Street
Holland Street
Queen's Road West
Hill Road
Whitty Street
Water Street
Western Street
Eastern Street
Queen Street
Macau Ferry Terminal
Hillier Street
Man Wah Lane
Jubilee Street
Pedder Street
Ice House Street
Bank Street
Murray Road
Admiralty MTR Station
Arsenal Street
Fenwick Street
Luard Road
O'Brien Road
Fleming Road
Tonnochy Road
Canal Road West
Foo Ming Street
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Tens of Thousands March in Hong Kong, Defying Face Mask Ban 6/10/2019
( https://www.nytimes.com/2019/10/06/wo... )

HONG KONG — Defying a new ban on face masks, tens of thousands of people marched across Hong Kong on Sunday, a largely peaceful show of force against the government punctuated by the increasingly common clashes between protesters and police.

The two marches, both in the pouring rain, were the first significant public gatherings since the ban took effect early Saturday, stirring anger that the government was infringing on the civil freedoms that this semiautonomous territory has maintained since being returned to Chinese control more than two decades ago.

Outside the shuttered malls and stores of a major shopping district in downtown Hong Kong, demonstrators, many wearing blue, gray or black masks, chanted “Hong Kongers, resist!” Across the harbor, protesters also held a march that began in the Tsim Sha Tsui neighborhood of Kowloon.

By nightfall, protesters on the fringes of both marches were vandalizing subway stations and throwing bricks and firebombs, leading to standoffs with the police, who blanketed some neighborhoods with tear gas. As the prospect of pitched street battles loomed, the police force warned in an all-caps text message to residents that “unauthorized public events” would be likely to cause violence.

The large marches and the widespread defiance of the emergency proclamation were both a symbol of the staying power of the monthslong pro-democracy movement and a potential test of local officials’ resolve to stop the demonstrators’ momentum.

The persistent and increasingly violent protests have strained the local economy, putting pressure on the government to take action. They are also testing the patience of China’s Communist Party leaders, who have watched the Hong Kong protests warily for months and warned that using force against them is an option.

The city has been bracing for more unrest since the government announced on a ban on face mask, gear that has become ubiquitous in the movement. In doing so, Hong Kong’s embattled leader invoked a rarely used, colonial-era law that allows for new regulations when the territory faces “a state of serious danger.”

The announcement immediately unleashed violent protests across the city on Friday. Hong Kong was quieter on Saturday, as a shutdown of the entire subway system brought the city to a near standstill, although masked protesters openly flouted the ban at scattered gatherings.
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