俄罗斯今日:明州的暴徒vs香港的和平示威者

u
umner
楼主 (未名空间)
https://www.rt.com/usa/490129-trump-minneapolis-hong-kong/

Minneapolis ‘thugs’ vs Hong Kong ‘protesters’: Chinese paper accuses
Trump of hypocrisy over riots

29 May, 2020

President Donald Trump has threatened to stamp out looting and riots in
Minnesota with the military. However, his administration’s support for
rioters in Hong Kong has drawn criticism from China’s most influential
newspaper.
The death of an unarmed black man at the hands of two police officers in
Minneapolis sparked a wave of rioting in the Minnesota city when a video of the incident was made public this week. Now, after three days of violence,
looting and arson, President Trump has threatened to send in the military,
warning the “thugs” involved that “when the looting starts, the shooting starts.”

Hu Xijin, editor-in-chief of China’s state-owned Global Times newspaper,
trolled Trump on Friday for his apparent hypocrisy. As protests and riots
consumed the semi-autonomous city of Hong Kong last winter, Trump signed an act mandating a yearly review of the city’s autonomy and allowing
Washington to sanction Chinese officials it claimed had unfairly cracked
down on the protests.

“Just three days after unrest broke out in Minnesota, Trump threatened the use of ‘shooting’ and announced the army supports the governor,” Xijin
tweeted. “I strongly condemn such threats. Please protect the people of
Minnesota, just like you sympathize with Hong Kong thugs.”

The Chinese editor also targeted State Secretary Mike Pompeo, who this week told Congress that Hong Kong no longer enjoys sufficient autonomy from
mainland China, opening the door to sanctions under the law signed by Trump last year.

"Secretary Pompeo, please stand with the angry people of Minneapolis, just
like you did with people of Hong Kong," he tweeted.

Xijin’s opinion is widely considered to align with that of the Chinese
Communist Party. As such, he is not the first Chinese official to criticize Trump for his government’s support of the Hong Kong protesters. Beijing has repeatedly called the policing of these protesters an internal matter,
warning the US off “meddling” in Chinese affairs. The Chinese Foreign
Ministry said last week that no country would let “separatists endanger
security,” a prophetic statement given what transpired in Minneapolis just days later.

Racially charged rioting is nothing new in the US. Even the choking to death of George Floyd bore a striking resemblance to the death in 2014 of Eric
Garner at the hands of an NYPD officer. Garner’s final utterance – “I can’t breathe” – became a rallying cry for anti-police protests across the
country, and his death also triggered weeks of nationwide riots.

However, the violence in Minneapolis has thus far seen a police station
burned to the ground and several retail outlets smashed, looted, and ram-
raided. As rioters continued to ransack the city with apparent impunity on
Thursday night, one of Trump’s “thugs”told a cameraman that the crowd of vandals were planning on “coming to the suburbs” next.

Xijin’s accusations of hypocrisy will likely fall on deaf ears. Not only
does the Global Times represent a state that’s rapidly becoming a new Cold War-style adversary of the US, but Trump has always been an outspoken
advocate of law enforcement and will not want to be seen as ‘weak’ on
crime. With the streets of Minneapolis looking more like a foreign
battlefield than an American city, Hong Kong will likely be the last thing
on Trump’s mind.

Following – but perhaps unrelated to – Xijin’s tweet, Trump later on
Friday morning exclaimed: “CHINA!”
u
umner

老胡威武
u
umner

Xijin is very sharp.