The Chinese regime’s leader is staying away from umbrellas, even when its pouring.
Journalists and onlookers were given raincoats and told to put away their trusty wet weather implements on a rainy Macau Friday, Dec. 19 when Xi Jinping arrived to celebrate the 15th anniversary of the city’s return to China, Radio Television Hong Kong reports.
A Hong Kong journalist told Agence France-Presse that umbrellas were banned because it “would affect flights.” Apparently, the authorities were concerned that unfurled umbrellas could fly out of loose grips, another reporter explained.
But the message couldn’t be clearer: The Chinese communist leader is not about to let anyone catch him near the symbol of Hong Kong’s recent pro-democracy protests.
International media dubbed the Hong Kong protests the Umbrella Movement after demonstrators opened umbrellas to shield themselves from tear gas and police batons on Sept. 28.
And in a remarkable quirk of fate, Xi Jinping ended up “joining” the protests.
A photograph of Xi Jinping with an umbrella won the National News Award — China’s Pulitzer equivalent — on Oct. 22, a week before the the first month anniversary of the Occupy protests.
