12-3 incident

12-3 incident
Part of the decolonisation of Asia
Governor of Macau José Manuel Nobre de Carvalho signs a statement of apology under a portrait of Mao Zedong, January 29, 1967.
DateDecember 3, 1966
Location
MethodsDemonstrations, strikes, boycotts
Resulted inProtesters' demands met
Parties
Lead figures
Units involved
Casualties
Death(s)8
Injuries212
Arrested62
12-3 incident
Chinese一二·三事件
Literal meaningOne-two-three incident
Portuguese name
PortugueseMotim 1-2-3

The 12-3 incident (Chinese: 一二·三事件; Portuguese: Motim 1-2-3) was a series of political demonstrations and riots against Portuguese colonial rule in Macau which occurred on December 3, 1966. The incident, inspired by the Cultural Revolution in the People's Republic of China (mainland China), occurred as a direct response to a violent police crackdown by colonial authorities against local Chinese protesters demonstrating against corruption and colonialism in Macau.[1]

Pressured by business leaders in Macau and the Chinese government, the colonial government agreed to meet the demands of the protesters and apologized for the police crackdown. Portuguese sovereignty over Macau severely diminished after the incident, leading to de facto Chinese suzerainty over the territory 33 years prior to the eventual handover of Macau.[2]

  1. ^ Macau History and Society, Zhidong Hao, Hong Kong University Press, 2011. ISBN 9789888028542. page 215
  2. ^ Mendes, p. 16. "In the end the "1, 2, 3" episode[...]Portugal resognised de facto Macau as a Chinese territory,[...]"

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