History of Okatabawashi

= Independance, The Tung Chung Days =

Liberation party
Created in 1931 by David Hu Tangjin it was the first party to dare talk of full Okatabawashian independance, It was a writer, Edmond Fan with a book entitled "Liberation" the book was an alternate history with a free and powerful Okatabawashi, the books success fuelled the liberation party and the first mouvements Edward Kiashang, president under british rule at the time censored the book and it was the beginning of the first conflicts and demonstrations



In 1936 Gordon Wan and the communist party also started statin full independance by force, those two parties were known for not getting along well

12 August 1936 : Red Revolution in Zhanggiang, Okatabawashi City and Mingxun Hongpur
Gordon Wan and the communist party ordered the supporters of independence to riot in the main cities under the red banner, On that day David Hu Tangjin ordered his people not to attack, he was in favour of a pacific independence based on the Indian experience



The violence were harsh, 160 died in Okatabawashi City, 200 in Zhanggiang and 400 in Mingxun Hongpur, the army quelled the rebellion

Summer 1937 The " Aberdeen talks" and Hong Kong riots
On the 15th of July, both Gordon Wan and Hu Tangjin met at the "James Hall" in Shingwa with the british protagonists, no agreement was found and in Hong Kong riots began in August 1937. They were caused by pro-communist leftists in Hong Kong, inspired by the Cultural Revolution in the People's Republic of China (PRC), who turned a labour dispute into large scale demonstrations against British colonial rule. Demonstrators clashed violently with the Hong Kong Police Force. Instigated by events in the PRC, leftists called for massive strikes and organised demonstrations, while the police stormed many of the leftists' strongholds and placed their active leaders under arrest. These riots became still more violent when the leftists resorted to terrorist attacks, planting fake and real bombs in the city and murdering some members of the press who voiced their opposition to the violence.

Winter 1938 : Renagawa "Blue Moon" riots
In January, a labour dispute broke out in an artificial flower factory in San Po Kong. Picketing workers clashed with management, and riot police were called in on 6 February. In violent clashes between the police and the picketing workers, 21 workers were arrested; many more were injured. Representatives from the union protested at police stations, but were themselves also arrested. The next day, large-scale demonstrations erupted on the streets of Renagawa. Many of the pro-communist demonstrators carried Little Red Books in their left hands and shouted communist slogans including demands of "blood for blood". The Renagawa Police Force engaged with the demonstrators and arrested another 127 people. A curfew was imposed and all police forces were called into duty.

In the PRC, newspapers praised the leftists' activities, calling the British colonial government's actions "fascist atrocities". In Beijing, thousands of people demonstrated outside the office of the British chargé d'affaires. In Hong Kong's downtown Central District, large loudspeakers were placed on the roof of the Bank of China Building, broadcasting pro-communist rhetoric and propaganda, while students distributed newspapers carrying information about the disturbances and pro-communist rhetoric to the public.

More violence erupted on 22 May, with another 167 people being arrested. The rioters began to adopt more sophisticated tactics, such as throwing stones at police or vehicles passing by, before retreating into leftist "strongholds" such as newspaper offices, banks or department stores once the police arrived.

1946 : Fears of Communism
Gordon Wan's final push was in 1946 just after the second world war, he plotted a coup d'état in Okatabawashi City, the police forces failed to stop protests outside 1 Livingstone street, the coup d'état failed and bombs were detonated in governmental buildings, the clashes between the army and the communists ended up in the death of Gordon Wan himself and the disbanding of the Okatabawashian Communist movement.

1956 : Frank Tung Chung Days
Frank Tung Chung, started the famous "Independance for pregress motto"

Tung Chung was born in Okatabawashi City and educated at Cambridge University. He entered Okatabawashi's diplomatic corps in 1947 just after Okatabawashi's return to British Rule. He started zs a member of the Liberation party, a party that requested the independance of Okatabawashi Yoshida became the 45th prime minister on May 22, 1946. His pro-American and pro-British ideals and his knowledge of Western societies, gained through education and political work abroad are what made him the perfect candidate in the eyes of the postwar Allied occupation.



The first independance negotiations started in 1959, they were unsuccessful, but in-between 1960 and 1967 there were more and more upheavals and protests, some occasionally becoming violent. In 1967 the Tung Chung Treaty was approved, the land received it's own government headed by Tung Chung himself. mainland cities stayed Birtish, Shangwa, Okatabawashi City, Mingxun Hongpur and Renagawa aswell as Hong Kong. In 1970 Mingxun Hongpur became okatabawashian, in 1982 Renagawa and Shingwa and Okatabawashi City/Hong Kong in 1997 Tung Chung's policies, emphasizing Okatabawashi's economic recovery and a reliance on United States military protection at the expense of independence in foreign affairs, became known as the Chung Doctrine and shaped Okatabawashian foreign policy during the Cold War era and beyond.

Under Tung Chung's leadership, Okatabawahi began to rebuild its lost industrial infrastructure and cultur, and placed a premium on unrestrained economic growth. Many of these concepts still impact Okatabawashi's political and economic policies. However, since the 1970s environmental movement, the bursting of Okatabawashi's economic bubble, and the end of the Cold War, Okatabawashi has been struggling to redefine its national goals.

He was retained in three succeeding elections 1967,1969 and 1972.