Umbrella Square Explained

Umbrella Square
Native Name:雨傘廣場
Native Name Lang:zh
Settlement Type:People's commune
Image Alt:Crowds refuse to disperse from Harcourt Road, creating Umbrella Plaza
Nickname:Umbrella Plaza
Coordinates:22.2795°N 114.1641°W
Subdivision Type:Hong Kong

Umbrella Square[1] [2], also called Umbrella Plaza,[3] describes a large roadway in Admiralty, Hong Kong occupied by protesters during the Umbrella Movement protests[4] [5] in September 2014. On 11 December 2014, after 74 days of occupation, the area was cleared by the police and reopened to motorised traffic.[6] [7]

Origin

The area became completely pedestrianised area after the 28 September 2014, when the Hong Kong police decided to employ tear gas against peaceful protesters. The use of teargas by the police brought hundreds of thousands of people to the area.

Geography and delimitation

Umbrella Square comprised virtually the entire lengths of Harcourt Road, and Tim Mei Avenue.[8] There were barricades on each end and on roads leading to or off both roads, numbering 21 in total.[6]

Initially an informal term by the occupiers, "Umbrella Square" became a recognised name as people continued to occupy the site.[4] [5] [8] The name became incorporated into maps. During the 2014 Hong Kong protests the area was home to around 2,000 tents of varying sizes,[9] many of which were given addresses by the residents. It was reported that postal services delivered to Umbrella Square tent addresses, although the Hong Kong Post officially denies having done so.[10] [11]

Culture

Jonathan Kaiman of The Guardian described Umbrella Square as a "high-functioning utopian collective blocked off by a handful of elaborate barricades". Upon entering, Kaiman observed that "the overwhelming feeling is one of entering an art fair, or a music festival – protesters sit on the pavement cross-legged, strumming guitars and checking their smartphones. During the day, tourists amble through the crowd, snapping photos with SLR cameras; at night, hundreds, sometimes thousands of supporters gather to hear speeches and performances."

Provisions (such as biscuits, soft drinks, toilet paper, face masks, and bottled water) were donated, and distributed to occupiers and visitors passing through.

Facilities and infrastructure

The public toilets in the vicinity were equally well-stocked with toiletries. Local architects have noted how the occupiers re-purposed the square from the roadway and adapted it to functional use; they created ad hoc architecture, such as barricades, supply infrastructure, recycling stations cinemas and libraries.[12] Art and infrastructure was added on a constant basis. Showers were erected, along with composting and electrical charging stations.[13] More than a hundred tents were available for rent, under condition that they be kept clean. In a workshop area, volunteer carpenters built steps, as well as desks and benches for students in the ad hoc study areas.[14]

Notable areas included the Lennon Wall, the Study Zone, and Dark Corner  - where the beating of a protester by seven police officers was captured on film and broadcast in a TVB news bulletin.[15] [16]

There was also a central podium where nightly talks and rallies were held, adjacent to which there was a press compound.

The encampments were referred to as "villages". Stickers and labels alluding to social change, freedom, and democracy were attached to road signs. Occupiers' flimsy tents were often given grandiose addresses such as "Umbrella Court" or "Democracy Gardens", parodying names given to luxury property developments in Hong Kong, an increasingly unaffordable city.[17]

Organisation

See main article: Umbrella Movement. The movement was composed of many fractious groups, but had no leadership or formal organisation overall.[18] However, colours and members of the Labour Party, Democratic Party, Civic Party, CTU, League of Social Democrats and People Power were regularly seen in Umbrella Square.

Time magazine described the organised chaos of the protest sites as "classical political anarchism: a self-organizing community that has no leader."[19] Teams of volunteers working in shifts deal with garbage collection and recycling, security and medical care.[19] [20]

External links

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Hong Kong's Protest Camps Are Organized Better than the Protests. Elizabeth Barber. Time.
  2. Web site: Someone should preserve Hong Kong's protest art before it's too late. Heather. Timmons. Quartz.
  3. Web site: Student, Occupy leaders announce vote on government's reform proposals. South China Morning Post.
  4. News: Noble. Josh. HK's 'Umbrella Square' takes on identity of its own. Financial Times. 17 October 2014.
  5. Web site: Kaiman. Jonathan. Hong Kong's 'Umbrella Square' one month on: how are protesters living?. 2 November 2014. The Guardian. 4 November 2014.
  6. Siu, Jasmine (12 December 2014). "Sweeping end to 75 days of occupation". The Standard
  7. Web site: Hong Kong protests: Arrests as Admiralty site is cleared . BBC . 11 December 2014 . 11 December 2014 .
  8. Web site: Hong Kong Braces for Fresh Occupy Protests, Activists to Form 'Umbrella Square'. Vasudevan. Sridharan. 10 October 2014. International Business Times.
  9. Web site: Hong Kong, une révolution artistique et numérique. 7 December 2014. Slate. fr.
  10. Web site: The Main Hong Kong Protest Site Is a Perfect Anarchist Collective. Time.
  11. Web site: Local Mail Delivery Service. Hong Kong Post. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20141104065632/http://www.hongkongpost.hk/eng/publications/news/2014/20141017b/index.htm. 4 November 2014. dmy-all.
  12. Tsang, Emily (10 December 2014). "Mapping out the protest sites for history". South China Morning Post.
  13. News: Mary Louise . Schumacher . 6 November 2014 . The enchanting art of Hong Kong's Umbrella Revolution . . 7 November 2014 .
  14. Web site: The best life hacks from Hong Kong's Umbrella Movement protests. Lily Kuo. Quartz.
  15. Web site: Lam. Oiwan. Take a Photographic Tour of Hong Kong's Pro-Democracy 'Umbrella Square'. Global Voices. 29 October 2014. 2 November 2014.
  16. Web site: Hong Kong Police 'Kick And Punch Handcuffed Protestor' In Dark Corner in Shocking Video. The Huffington Post UK. 15 October 2014.
  17. Web site: Fun with puns: 'Umbrella Terms' a new weapon in Hong Kong democracy battle. GMA News Online.
  18. Web site: Hong Kong is attacking the protest movement's biggest weakness—its fragmented leadership. Gwynn Guilford. Quartz.
  19. Web site: Hong Kong Protests: Anarchism in Action. Elizabeth Barber / Hong Kong. Time. 8 November 2014.
  20. News: Hong Kong protests: Instant architecture and the Occupy Central 'village'. The Straits Times. 23 October 2014. 28 October 2014.