View from Hong Kong: Five people who will shape 2014
'Tis the season to publish those year-end predictions. Forecasting in any form
-- from a sideshow psychic to the Magic 8 Ball -- is usually a foolish
enterprise. So this is not a crystal ball gaze at the newsmakers that
will make the headlines next year. (Article from CNN)
1. The June 4 protester
June 4, 2014 will be the 25th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square
crackdown. In 2013, tens of thousands of Hong Kong residents braved a
rainstorm to hold a vigil
in the city's Victoria Park to honor the victims and express anger at
Beijing. Though such protests are banned in mainland China, the vigil is
an annual event in Hong Kong, a self-administered region under Chinese
sovereignty. Twenty-five years after the crackdown, how many more in
Hong Kong will observe this major anniversary? And how will Beijing
respond?
2. The NSA leaker
OK, this is a cheat. I'm not closely following Edward Snowden himself. Honestly, I don't care about where he's pushing a shopping cart in
Moscow. What I do care about are the yet-to-be-released leaks that will
further reveal the size and scope of surveillance efforts by the U.S.
National Security Agency. Incredibly, Guardian editor Alan Rusbridger
says they have published just 1% of
the files leaked by Snowden. In the year ahead, I'll be looking out for
the revelations yielded by the rest of the damning data dump.
3. Xiaomi's new hire
Hugo Barra made headlines
in August when he ditched Google for Xiaomi. The big hire was a big
moment for the Chinese smartphone maker, raising expectations that the
so-called "Apple of China" would greatly expand its market reach beyond
its domestic market. Since then, Xiaomi has announced plans
to launch next year in Southeast Asia. With Barra on board, can
Xiaomi's inexpensive and highly customized Android smartphones find as
much favor abroad as at home?
4. The Marshal
North Korea's young leader, Kim Jong Un, remains as perplexing as ever. Why did he execute his former trusted mentor
and uncle Jang Song Thaek? Why did he release American veteran Merrill
Newman? And why the soft spot for former NBA star Dennis Rodman? After a
year of puzzling and provocative moves -- including missile and nuclear
tests -- The Marshal has forced the world's attention on him, raising
concerns of more brinksmanship to come.
5. The typhoon survivor
In the immediate aftermath of Super Typhoon Haiyan, a CNN crew encountered Juvelyn Taniega
on the devastated streets of Tacloban -- the capital of the Philippine
province of Leyte. She was crouched among the rubble of what was her
home, where she last saw her husband and six children alive. In 2014, we
must remember the victims of Haiyan because after the emergency relief,
comes the long task of recovery and rebuilding. We must remember
Juvelyn Taniega and the scores of survivors like her.
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