arriba Ir arriba

Protestas pro-democracia en Hong Kong

Miles de personas protestan en Hong Kong para exigir que el jefe del Gobierno de la ciudad sea elegido por sufragio universal después de 2017, cuando China tomará el control

anterior siguiente
7 Fotos 4 / 7 ver a toda pantalla
  • Una manifestante muestras sus manos a la Policía

    Una manifestante muestras sus manos a la Policía

    A demonstrator gestures opposite policemen during a pro-democracy protest in Hong Kong on September 28, 2014. Police fired tear gas as tens of thousands of pro-democracy demonstrators brought parts of central Hong Kong to a standstill in a dramatic escalation of protests that have gripped the semi-autonomous Chinese city for days. AFP PHOTO / XAUME OLLEROS
  • Policía armada monta guardia en el centro de Hong Kong

    Policía armada monta guardia en el centro de Hong Kong

    Armed police watch as pro-democracy demonstrators listen to a speech during a rally outside the Hong Kong government headquarters on September 29, 2014. Police repeatedly fired tear gas after tens of thousands of pro-democracy demonstrators brought parts of central Hong Kong to a standstill on September 28 in protest at Beijing's refusal to grant the city unfettered democracy. AFP PHOTO / DALE DE LA REY
  • Manifestantes de Hong Kong con las caras tapadas para protegerse de los gases lacrimógenos

    Manifestantes de Hong Kong con las caras tapadas

    HKG07. Hong Kong (China), 28/09/2014.- A composite image shows eight pro-democracy protesters with covered faces as they join others in blocking the main highway through Admiralty, next to the Hong Kong government's headquarters in Hong Kong's downtown district, on the first day of the mass civil disobedience campaign Occupy Central, Hong Kong, China, 28 September 2014. Thousands of pro-democracy demonstrators surrounded central government offices and blocked major streets in Hong Kong on Sunday to protest China's decision to restrict open elections in the territory. The protests followed a decision last month by China's top legislative body to restrict the nominations for chief executive in 2017. The candidate who wins the popular vote would have to be formally appointed by the central government before taking office. (Elecciones, Protestas) EFE/EPA/ALEX HOFFORD

Últimas fotogalerías Noticias

Ver más contenido destacado