China celebrates 70 years as Hong Kong unrest looms large
BEIJING, China — China celebrates 70 years of Communist Party supremacy Tuesday with a parade of tanks, missiles and troops, a muscular display of its rising superpower status even as it faces an unprecedented challenge to its authority in seething Hong Kong.
Authorities in Beijing have closed roads, banned the flying of kites, and shut some bars as they tightened security for an event celebrating China's journey from a country broken by war and poverty to being the world's second-largest economy.
The massive military parade will roll across Tiananmen Square under the gaze of President Xi Jinping, the country's most powerful leader since Mao Zedong, who founded the People's Republic of China on October 1, 1949.
New weapons
"Unity is iron and steel. Unity is a source of strength," Xi said in a speech on Monday evening.
But behind the projection of strength at the
"The party hopes that this occasion will add to its legitimacy and rally support at a time of internal and external challenges," Adam Ni, China researcher at Macquarie University in Sydney, told AFP.
US trade war negotiations have dragged on, and African swine fever has raced through the country's pig supply, sending pork prices soaring.
But the major headache is Hong Kong, where pro-democracy protesters plan to grab the spotlight from Beijing on Tuesday with their own rally against what they see as the erosion of their special freedoms.
The semi-autonomous city has
In an
But Hong Kong's chief executive, Carrie Lam,
Communist Party grandees will watch as 15,000 soldiers march across Tiananmen,
"Beijing wants to highlight its military modernisation, political unity, and determination to protect its interests," Ni said.
'Chinese dream'
The Communist Party has repeatedly defied the odds to remain in power for seven decades.
Under Mao, tens of millions of people died during the disastrous Great Leap Forward, and
After Mao died in 1976, the party launched the reform and opening-up policy under paramount leader Deng Xiaoping, starting decades of breakneck growth and development.
But the Communist Party (CCP)
The Party wants to show on Tuesday "that under the leadership of the CCP, China is making strides toward becoming a rich and powerful country", said Bonnie Glaser, senior adviser for Asia at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington.
The Chinese leader has
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