Elaine Chow: 14 March, 1986 – 27 October, 2005

Elaine ChowIn loving memory of Elaine Chow who committed suicide in the early hours of the 27 October 2005. Gone but never forgotten!

Elaine was a wonderful, vibrant and happy woman, who brought joy to everyone she met. Her smile could and would brighten the sunniest and dreariest of days.

Her response to my full-time job offer during her internship was “You mean, you want to pay me to go out and eat”. Writing that here and remembering her radiant smile when she said it, has managed to bring a smile to my face – even through the massive cloak of despair that I still feel at her death.

And while tears run down my cheeks, and my heart breaks as my mind replays the images of Elaine falling to her death – so fast yet in slow motion as my brain cannot process the truth of what it sees and my legs will never be moving fast enough to reach her…

The pain of those memories never seems to fade, but nor I hope will the memories of her smile and the joy she infused to all around her. RIP Elaine.

3 people a day, on average, commit suicide in Hong Kong, it’s the unseen killer, if you know someone who’s talking (even jokingly) of it get them help/talk to them. If you’re thinking of suicide, please please talk to someone first.
Samaritans Hong Kong: 2896-0000 www.samaritans.org.hk

Taxi Drivers Paid $400 to Stage ‘Protest’

http://bcmagazine.smugmug.com/Bcene-photos/2014/Taxi-Drivers-Paid-400-Protest/44789926_Gwxd2B#!i=3590583185&k=Cx2Cpwj

At around 5:30pm on Sunday, some 20 taxis were stopped on Gloucester Road attempting to breach the police roadblock (under the pedestrian bridge to Immigration Tower) and drive into Admiralty to attack the student protests.

Around 50 police responded as several of the drivers left their parked cars, unfurled banners and tried to physically push past the police while verbally insulting those who’d gathered to watch. The drivers who’d remained in their cars, engines on, spent several minutes with their fingers on horns disrupting a large part of Wanchai with the noise.

Speaking to some of the drivers, bc asked why they were there “Because our manager told us to come” said one, who then added “If we come, make some noise and ‘protest’ then our shift is free”. When asked to explain he clarified “The shift fee for renting my taxi today is $400, because I come to ‘protest’ this shift is free”. Two other drivers backed up the first’s comments.

http://bcmagazine.smugmug.com/Bcene-photos/2014/Taxi-Drivers-Paid-400-Protest/44789926_Gwxd2B#!i=3590571415&k=mB2fGpz

http://bcmagazine.smugmug.com/Bcene-photos/2014/Taxi-Drivers-Paid-400-Protest/44789926_Gwxd2B#!i=3590573092&k=qBFV2Lx

http://bcmagazine.smugmug.com/Bcene-photos/2014/Taxi-Drivers-Paid-400-Protest/44789926_Gwxd2B#!i=3590578861&k=W4Ft2T8

Click on the photos to see more

http://bcmagazine.smugmug.com/Bcene-photos/2014/Taxi-Drivers-Paid-400-Protest/44789926_Gwxd2B#!i=3590624262&k=hhLRWjq

Umbrella Movement Images – 4 October, 2014

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http://bcmagazine.smugmug.com/Bcene-photos/2014/Umbrella-Movement-4-October/44745934_wPZJfz#!i=3586976361&k=np6ZdGf

China National Day: Flag Raising Ceremony – 1 October, 2014

http://bcmagazine.smugmug.com/Bcene-photos/2014/China-National-Day-Flag/44679456_TmWfKJ#!i=3577724506&k=2VSzkwM

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http://bcmagazine.smugmug.com/Bcene-photos/2014/China-National-Day-Flag/44679456_TmWfKJ#!i=3577786903&k=PbQbCmZ

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Occupy Hong Kong Images – 30 September 2014

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“Let’s Hurt a Few and Hope They Go Home”

Lets Hurt a Few and Hope They Go Home

Clouds of tear gas drifted across Hong Kong as the police with no obvious plan used violence and an apparent tactic of ‘lets hurt a few and hope they go home’ to try and quell the peaceful protests looking to get open elections for the Chief Executive in 2017.

Whether the protestors succeed in their aims, the biggest loser today is the police – their needless use of excessive force has drawn more people to the protest and achieved nothing. If they’d followed up the first tear gas volley to push out from their barriers and looked to re-open Connaught Road Central to traffic, perhaps the gas use ‘might’ have been justified.

But no, the ‘lets hurt a few and hope they go home’ tactic was pure police intimidation. Whoever gave that order should be charged with harming the injured protestors.

One thing the police must know is that Hongkongers are peaceful protestors, we’ve had hundreds of marches since the last use of tear gas in 2005, involving many groups and a total lack of violence. Even the very emotive 4 June march is trouble free.

The arrival of the military green clad Police Tactical Unit, wearing riot gear, gas masks and wielding and pointing shotguns at un-armed citizens surely marks a new low. What did the PTU achieve? Hurt a few more people, raise the tension several levels bring more people appalled at the police violence onto the streets.

The plan from on-high does seem to be… get the military looking PTU on the street, use violence and the threat of increased violence to intimidate and suppress. Maybe that works on the mainland and in the past without social media and live streaming video. But all its achieved today is to escalate the tensions and hurt innocent people. It is easy after all, if your wearing military grade riot gear and wielding batons to beat up on people throwing up from the effect of tear gas and pepper spray!

At the end of the day, you have to feel for many of the rank and file blue uniformed police obeying the clueless orders from above… talking to many of them, bc found they’d been on duty for as long as 31 hours without sleep and with no relief or rest in-sight.

Occupy Central: Admiralty

http://bcmagazine.smugmug.com/Bcene-photos/2014/Occupy-Central-28-September/44617943_tmszPJ#!i=3570128906&k=8SLQm75

Away from the confrontations at Legco, Admiralty and Wanchai are chock full of demonstrators with Queensway, Hennessy Road, Lockhart Road all blocked and pedestrian only.

The police give every impression of being completely out-thought and having hopelessly under-estimated a well-prepared and organised protest who have effortless isolated Central.

http://bcmagazine.smugmug.com/Bcene-photos/2014/Occupy-Central-28-September/44617943_tmszPJ#!i=3570090244&k=4gRZL4S

This protest is not going away until the organisers call it off – the police simply do not have man-power to deal with all the locations blocked.

Will the government put the PLA on the streets…

http://bcmagazine.smugmug.com/Bcene-photos/2014/Occupy-Central-28-September/44617943_tmszPJ#!i=3570101785&k=3vMJZs3

Video and photos of the street blockades. http://bcmagazine.smugmug.com/Bcene-photos/2014/Occupy-Central-28-September

Tear Gas – Hong Kong

Shortly before 6pm on the 28 September 2014, and without warning the Hong Kong Police attacked the people they are sworn to serve with tear gas… there was no reason for such an aggressive escalation of force during a peaceful protest.

After several volleys of tear gas, the police called in the shotgun wielding Police Tactical Unit, garbed in military green fatigues it was tragic for Hong Kong to see the PTU point guns at un-armed civilians with their hands in the air as their colleagues appeared to fire tear gas rounds directly at protestors.

Earlier in day the police had been using batons and pepper spray against groups of protestors close to the police barrier cordoning off the government offices.

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images and video copyright bc magazine / Simon Durrant