2024 11,23 23:21 |
|
2012 09,16 17:00 |
|
中国人が反日デモでdiorやロレックスの店まで破壊 Anti-Japan protests turn violent in China 世界よ、これが中国人だ。 もう日本企業関係ないな! まさに『火事場泥棒』とは この事。 ワタシは下記記事とYouTube映像を用いて世界にこの愚行を発信したい。
Anti-Japan protests turn violent in China Some protestors opposed to Japan's nationalization of the Senkaku Islands are turning violent in several Chinese cities. Demonstrations were called via the Internet for at least 17 cities across the country on Saturday. It's the first weekend since the Japanese government nationalized the islands in the East China Sea. Protests began in front of the Japanese Embassy in the capital, Beijing, on Saturday morning. Some protestors are hurling eggs and plastic bottles toward the embassy's compound. The number of protestors rose to several thousand. Some of them tried to storm into the embassy, resulting in a skirmish with hundreds of police officers. In the inland city of Chongqing, a thousand-strong rally was held in front of the building housing the Japanese Consulate. Some participants turned violent, striking the building's windows with a steel pipe and breaking a sign at a parking lot. The consulate is on the top floor, the 37th. Officials say no damage was done to their office. In another inland city, Xian in the province of Shaanxi, around 2,000 people are demonstrating, holding signs with the message that the islands belong to China. Some protestors smashed windows of a Japanese-made patrol car and a passenger vehicle on the streets. In Changsha in the inland province of Hunan, more than 3,000 demonstrators have reportedly been stopped by police in front of a Japanese-affiliated supermarket. In the southern city of Dongguan in Guangdong province, windows were broken at a Japanese restaurant.
Postings on the Internet indicate that rallies are also being held in other cities.
Anti-Japan demonstration turns violent in Qingdao Demonstrations against Japan's nationalization of the disputed Senkaku Islands have turned violent in China's Shandong Province. Japanese factories and stores operating there have been severely damaged as a result. In the coastal city of Qingdao, demonstrators called for a boycott of products made in Japan and for all Japanese nationals to leave China. Angry protesters broke into 10 factories affiliated with Japanese firms. They set fire to buildings and destroyed manufacturing facilities. Japanese supermarket and department store chain outlets in Qingdao and the eastern city of Suzhou were looted or vandalized. In the southern province of Guangdong and eastern province of Jiangsu, protesters smashed windows and broke into Japanese restaurants. In the inland city of Xian demonstrators were seen overturning Japanese cars parked on the street. At the Japanese Embassy in Beijing, envoy Hidehisa Horinouchi spoke by telephone to a senior official of the Chinese Foreign Ministry. Horinouchi expressed regret over a series of incidents that had occurred across China, despite Japan's repeated requests to ensure the safety of Japanese nationals and businesses in the country. The Chinese official replied that his government is strongly urging demonstrators to exert self-restraint. NHK - Protestors loot Japanese Jusco store in Qingdao China PR |
|
コメント |
コメント投稿 |
|
忍者ブログ [PR] |