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Hong Kongers use masquerade as new protest tactic

Associated Press
1833075_web1_1833075-f4d32306a4a047ac80f5566536a191a9
AP
This combination photo shows masked protesters during protests in Hong Kong Friday, Oct. 18, 2019. Hong Kong protesters masqueraded as Winnie the Pooh, Guy Fawkes and other characters in defiance of a government ban on face coverings at public gatherings.
1833075_web1_1833075-f5e4511deb844e0b9cf7a3408a1cdad0
AP
A protester wears a mask during a demonstration in Hong Kong, Friday, Oct. 18, 2019. Hong Kong protesters masqueraded as Winnie the Pooh and other characters in defiance of a government ban on face coverings at public gatherings.
1833075_web1_1833075-6e13bf10ece3459280628957b205417f
AP
A protester wears a mask forming a human chain during a protest in Hong Kong, Friday, Oct. 18, 2019. Hong Kong protesters masqueraded as various characters in defiance of a government ban on face coverings at public gatherings.
1833075_web1_1833075-0972bbdde1e146bb9bc979b27ae04d55
AP
A protester wears a mask during a demonstration in Hong Kong, Friday, Oct. 18, 2019. Hong Kong protesters masqueraded as various characters in defiance of a government ban on face coverings at public gatherings.
1833075_web1_1833075-f91b9989801d424189afdb595bce9715
AP
A protester wears a mask, forming a human chain during a protest in Hong Kong, Friday, Oct. 18, 2019. Hong Kong protesters masqueraded as various characters in defiance of a government ban on face coverings at public gatherings.
1833075_web1_1833075-cf0fc254fec74ffd98946d3bf84ee228
AP
A protester wears a mask during a protest in Hong Kong, Friday, Oct. 18, 2019. Hong Kong protesters masqueraded as various characters in defiance of a government ban on face coverings at public gatherings.

HONG KONG — Winnie the Pooh, Guy Fawkes, Pepe the Frog — these are the new faces of Hong Kong’s pro-democracy protest movement.

Demonstrators masqueraded Friday night as their favorite characters in defiance of the government’s ban this month on face coverings at public gatherings.

Protesters in the semi-autonomous Chinese city took a humorous approach to draw attention to their cause as they try to keep up the pressure on the government five months since the movement erupted.

Many assumed the identity of Winnie the Pooh, because Chinese internet users joke that the talking bear resembles President Xi Jinping.

Others wore Guy Fawkes masks, a global symbol of antigovernment protests. Some became Pepe the Frog, a character adopted by Hong Kong protesters unaware of its association with U.S. far-right extremists.

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