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DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Shanghai gets muted Chinese New Year after crush
by Staff Writers
Shanghai (AFP) Feb 18, 2015


Hong Kong leader tells residents to 'be inspired' by sheep
Hong Kong (AFP) Feb 18, 2015 - Hong Kong's pro-Beijing leader has told residents in his Lunar New Year address to be "inspired" by this year's zodiac animal -- the sheep -- after anti-government protests paralysed parts of the city.

Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying encouraged residents to "take inspiration" from the sheep, describing the zodiac ungulates as "mild and gentle animals living peacefully in groups".

Leung said the past year "was no easy ride" with the city "rife with difference and conflicts" -- a thinly veiled reference to the pro-democracy rallies that brought some streets in the financial hub to a standstill for over two months.

"In the coming year, I hope that all people in Hong Kong will take inspiration from the sheep's character and pull together in an accommodating manner," he added.

Leung has frequently drawn ridicule -- and anger -- from Hong Kong's vocal pro-democracy supporters for his pro-Beijing stance.

"Of course you'd like everyone to turn into sheep," one netizen commented on a local news site, using Leung's local nickname of a "wolf".

During the protests that brought thousands onto the streets to call for fully free leadership elections, Leung was frequently portrayed as the sheep's mortal enemy -- a wolf.

China has promised people in the semi-autonomous city the right to vote for their next chief executive in 2017. But it ruled that nominees must be vetted by a pro-Beijing committee, a proposal that activists have slammed as false democracy.

The Chinese lunar calendar is based on the cycles of the moon and Chinese folklore ascribes 12 animals to each year in the rotating cycle.

Shanghai is toning down Chinese New Year celebrations by cancelling events and limiting people at tourist spots after a stampede killed 36 people seven weeks earlier.

Revellers, many of them young women, were trampled to death on New Year's Eve after flocking to the historic riverfront, known as the Bund, a popular tourist destination.

Police on foot patrol and driving golf cart-like vehicles kept an eye on tourists who flocked to the Bund on Wednesday, the eve of the traditional festival.

Large stretches of the Bund remain closed off to the public by a temporary wall put up by the city shortly after the accident.

"Shanghai is safe. That was just a chance accident," said one tourist from the southern province of Fujian, taking a group photo with family and friends near where the crush occurred.

In the wake of the accident, the Shanghai government has cancelled at least five events during the week-long holiday, including a food fair and traditional bell-ringing at the Longhua temple.

The city has also announced it will restrict the number of visitors at more than 70 tourist spots, including the viewing platform of the Oriental Pearl TV Tower and the flagship Shanghai Museum.

Restrictions on numbers have not been announced for the Bund, where the crush also injured 49 people. However, police and security guards were limiting access to an elevated promenade along the riverfront through just a few designated points.

"This kind of accident is common in China, everyone going in one direction without thinking," said another tourist from central Henan province, who gave his surname as Chao. "The government is giving it lots of attention now."

An investigative report blamed police and city officials, who were aware of overcrowding but failed to act and communicate the risk to higher-level authorities.

In January, the city announced that 11 officials would be punished, with four removed from their posts.

China's State Council, or cabinet, has called on local governments nationwide to control large gatherings at tourist spots during the Chinese New Year.

At the Yu Garden, another tourist site located on the site of Shanghai's former old city, metal barriers and security guards loudly blowing whistles kept the crowds in check.

An annual outdoor event for the Lantern Festival, which falls 15 days from the start of the Chinese New Year, at the Yu Garden has also been cancelled.


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