Macau - meaning of word
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Macau



{| border=1 align=right cellpadding=4 cellspacing=0 width=300 style="margin: 0 0 1em 1em; background: #f9f9f9; border: 1px #aaaaaa solid; border-collapse: collapse; font-size: 95%;" |+中華人民共和國澳門特別行政區
Região Administrativa Especial de
Macau da República Popular da China
| align="center" colspan="2"| {| border=0 cellpadding=2 cellspacing=0 style="background:#f9f9f9; text-align:center;" | width="130px"| || align=center width=130px| |- | width="130px"| (Flag of Macau) | align=center width=130px| (Coat of Arms of Macau) |} |- | align=center colspan=2 | ''National motto: none'' |- | align=center colspan=2 style="background:#f9f9f9;" | |- |Official language || Chinese language and Portuguese language |- |Chief Executive of Macau || Edmund Ho Hau-wah |- |Area
- Total
- % water |List of countries by area
1 E7 m²
0% |- |Population
- Total (2004)
- Population density |List of countries by population
451,000
16,521/km² |- |Establishment
 - Date
|Handover from Portugal to the People's Republic of China
20 December 1999 |- |Currency || Pataca (MOP) |- | Time zone | Coordinated Universal Time+8 (AWST) |- | Top-level domain || .mo |- | List_of_country_calling_codes || +853 |- |} The '''Macau Special Administrative Region of the People's Republic of China, short form Macau or Macao''' (馬交) (see #Names), is a small territory on the southern coast of China. It is 70 km southwest of Hong Kong and 145 km from Guangzhou. It was the oldest European colony in China, dating back to the 16th century. The Portugal government transferred sovereignty over Macau to the People's Republic of China in 1999, and it is now run as a Special Administrative Region of the PRC. Residents of Macau mostly speak Cantonese Chinese natively; Mandarin Chinese, Portuguese, and English are also spoken. Broadly, ''Macanese'' refers to all permanent inhabitants of Macau. But narrowly, it refers to an ethnic group in Macau originating from Portuguese descent, usually mixed with Chinese blood. Besides historical colonial relics, the biggest attractions in Macau are the casinos. Though many forms of gambling are legal there, the most popular game is Pai Gow, a game played with Chinese dominoes. Gamblers from Hong Kong often take a one-day excursion to the city. Ferry service by hydrofoil between Hong Kong and Macau is available 24 hours a day, every day. == Names == The name "Macau" (馬交 Cantonese Chinese Jyutping: maa3 gaau1) is thought to be derived from "'Templo de A-Má" (媽閣廟 Cantonese Jyutping: maa1 gok3), a still-existing landmark built in 1448 dedicated to the goddess Matsu. The more popular Chinese name of ''Àomén'' (澳門, Cantonese Jyutping: ou3 mun4) means "Inlet Gates". The "gates" refer to two erect gate-like mountains of Nantai () and Beitai (). Or the other source: "Ao" from Macau's previous name "Heung San O" and "men" from "door", as it is geographically situated at "Cross' Door". Macau is also known as Ho King O (壕鏡澳; Haojing'ao; "Trench-mirror Inlet"), Heung San O (香山澳; Xiangshan'ao; "Fragrant-mountain Inlet"), Lin Do (蓮島; Liandao; "Lotus Island"), as well as "Soda port" (疏打埠). ''Macau'' is the only official Portuguese spelling. In English, both ''Macao'' and ''Macau'' are used. ''Macao'' is the English spelling used on government documents, such as passports and immigration forms. == History == ''Main article: History of Macau'' Macau was first settled by the Portuguese in 1557. Beginning in 1670, Portugal leased the territory although there was no transfer of sovereignty. Macau prospered as a port and was a subject of repeated attempts by the Netherlands to conquer it in the 17th century. After the House of Braganza regained control of Portugal from the Spanish Habsburgs in 1640, Macau was granted the official title of ''Cidade do (Santo) Nome de Deus de Macau, Não há outra mais Leal'' (City of the (Holy) Name of God of Macau, There is none more Loyal). With Hong Kong established as a British Crown Colony, Macau declined as regional trading center as larger ships were drawn to the deep water port of Victoria Harbour. In 1849, Portugal declared the colony independent of China. This was recognized by the Chinese government in 1887. In 1955, the Salazar regime declared Macau, in common with other Portuguese colonies, an "Political divisions of Portugal#Former Regions" of Portugal). Though Macanese culture has always been a mixture between Chinese and Portuguese this did not always come about peacefully. Chinese citizens efforts to establish their own identity were often counter to the aims of the Portuguese government. In 1966 residents tried to obtain a license for a private school in Taipa, a city in Macau. After being rejected many times they went ahead and started building without permits. On November 15th, 1966, the Portuguese police arrested the school officials and beat construction workers, residents, and press reporters. As a result, Chinese teachers and students gathered at the Governor’s house to peacefully protest, but on December 3rd the government ordered them to be arrested. This stirred up the anger of the general public and more people came to protest. The Portuguese government sent riot police and declared martial law. As result of the protests 11 people died and 200 were injured. To peacefully oppose the government, the Chinese people enacted “three no’s” - no taxes, no service, no selling to Portuguese. They were successful and on January 29th, 1967 the Portuguese government of Macau signed a statement of apology. This marked the beginning of equal treatment and recognition of Chinese identity and of defacto Chinese control of the colony. After the leftist military coup of 1974, the now democratic Portuguese government was determined to relinquish all its overseas possessions. However, there was no interest on the part of the People's Republic of China in regaining the territory. In 1976, Lisbon redefined Macau as a ''Special Territory'', and granted it a large measure of administrative and economic independence. In addition, Portugal and the PRC agreed to regard Macau as 'a Chinese territory under Portuguese administration'. This status was made anomalous by the agreement in 1985 to return Hong Kong to PRC rule, and in 1987, an agreement was made with the People's Republic of China to make Macau a Special Administrative Region. The Macau Special Administrative Region finally came into being on December 20th 1999. == Politics == ''Main article: Politics of Macau'' The Chief Executive of Macau is appointed by the People's Republic of China's central government after selection by an election committee, whose members are nominated by corporate bodies. The chief executive appears before a cabinet, the Executive Council, of between 7 and 11 members. Edmund Ho, a community leader and banker, is the first China-appointed chief executive of the Macau SAR, having replaced General de Rocha Vieira on December 20th, 1999. The legislative organ of the territory is the Legislative Assembly, a 23-member body comprising eight directly elected members, eight appointed members representing functional constituencies and seven members appointed by the chief executive. The Legislative Assembly is responsible for general lawmaking. The legal system is based largely on Portuguese law. The territory has its own independent judicial system, with a high court — the Court of Final Appeal (CFA). Judges are selected by a committee and appointed by the chief executive.
== Subdivisions == Macau comprises two administrative subdivisions: * The Northern District (北區): Macau Peninsula * The Islands District (離島區): Taipa and Coloane Although the phrase "Northern District", broadly speaking, may refer to the entire Macau peninsula, some of the people in Macau use the phrase "Northern District" more narrowly. It refers to the northern part of the Macau peninsula, and the northern part of the Macau peninsula is situated near the border of China. In this way, a lot of people travel to and from China by land (on foot or with land transportation) through the northern district. During the last periods of Portuguese rule, the peninsular (northern) district was administered by the Macau Municipal Council (Câmara Municipal de Macau), and the islands by the Islands Municipal Council (Câmara Municipal das Ilhas). After the handover to China in 1999, these were transferred to the Provisional Municipal Council of Macau (臨時澳門市政執行委員會; Câmara Municipal de Macau Provisória) and the Provisional Municipal Council of the Islands (臨時海島市政執行委員會; Câmara Municipal das Ilhas Provisória) respectively per Article 15, [http://www.imprensa.macau.gov.mo/bo/i/1999/01/lei01.asp Law 1/1999]; the corresponding Municipal Assembly (Assembleia Municipal) was also changed to a provisional one (臨時市政議會; Assembleia Municipal Provisória). Article 16 and Annex XII of [http://www.imprensa.macau.gov.mo/bo/i/1999/01/regadm06.asp Law 6/1999] changed the [http://www.fotw.net/flags/mo-mau.html Portuguese-style] coat-of-arms with two angels as heraldic supporters to a [http://www.fotw.net/flags/mo-mau99.html simple design] of a key with two birds as supporters. Implicitly, this also revoked the historical name of ''Cidade do (Santo) Nome de Deus de Macau, Não há outra mais Leal'' (City of the (Holy) Name of God of Macau, There is none more Loyal) which had religion and monarchy overtones. Subsequently in 2001, [http://www.imprensa.macau.gov.mo/bo/i/2001/51/lei17.asp Law 17/2001] and [http://www.imprensa.macau.gov.mo/bo/i/2001/51/regadm32.asp Administrative Regulation 32/2001] introduced the [http://www.iacm.gov.mo/ Institute (or Bureau) of Civic and Municipal Affairs] (民政總署; Instituto para os Assuntos Cívicos e Municipais; IACM) which replaced the Provisional Municipal Councils. The IACM was given a [http://www.imprensa.macau.gov.mo/bo/i/2001/51/Image1.gif simple logotype] based on the Chinese character for 'civilians'. == Geography == ''Main article: Geography of Macau'' Macau consists of Macau Peninsula, and the islands of Taipa and Coloane. The peninsula is formed by the Zhujiang (Pearl River) estuary on the east and the Xijiang (West River) on the west. It borders the Zhuhai Special Economic Zone in mainland China. Macau has a generally flat terrain resulting from extensive land reclamation, but numerous steep hills mark the original natural land mass. The Macau peninsula was originally an island, but gradually a connecting sandbar turned into a narrow isthmus. Land reclamation in the 17th century made Macau into a peninsula. With a dense urban environment, Macau has no arable land, pastures, forest, or woodland. Because of this deficiency, Macau's people traditionally have looked to the sea for their livelihood. == Economy == ''Main article: Economy of Macau'' Macau's economics is based largely on tourism, including gambling. Textile and fireworks manufacturing are the largest employers after gambling. Efforts to diversify have spawned other small industries, such as toys, artificial flowers, and electronics. The clothing industry has provided about three-fourths of export earnings, and the gambling industry is estimated to contribute more than 40% of GDP. More than 8 million tourists visited Macau in 2000. Although the recent growth in gambling and tourism has been driven primarily by mainland Chinese, tourists from Hong Kong remain the most numerous. Recently gang violence, a dark spot on the economy, has significantly declined, to the benefit of the tourism sector. During the last four years, the average growth rate of the economy has been approximately 10% per year. In 2004 gambling revenues from Macau's casinos were for the first time greater than those of Las Vegas (each about $5 billion), which means Macau is now the biggest gambling centre in the World. == Demographics == ''Main article: Demographics of Macau'' Considered as a "dependent area", Macau is the List of countries by population density. Macau's population is 95% Chinese people, primarily Cantonese and some Hakka, both from nearby Guangdong Province. The remainder are of Portugal or mixed Chinese-Portuguese ancestry, or the so-called Macanese. Some Japanese, including descendants of Japanese Catholics who were expelled by shoguns, also live in Macau. The official languages are Portuguese language and Chinese languages. Though the residents commonly speak Cantonese (linguistics), both Cantonese and Mandarin language are ''de facto'' official. English language is spoken in tourist areas. Portuguese_Creole#Macanese, an ancient Portuguese based dialect, is almost extinct. == Culture == ''Main article: Culture of Macau'' == Landmarks == * Ruins of Saint Paul's Cathedral * Casino Lisboa * Macau Tower == Miscellaneous == [[Image:MacauLotusFountain.JPG|thumb|right|200px|Lotus is the symbol of Macau. There is a fountain in the shape of a lotus outside the Macau Tower.]] * Like Hong Kong and the United Kingdom, but unlike both mainland China and Portugal, traffic in Macau travels on the left, and the majority of vehicles are right hand drive. (Portugal and southern provinces of China also originally drove on the left.) * Like Hong Kong, Macau also has a flower to represent the city. While the representative flower of Hong Kong is the ''Bauhinia blakeana'', the representative flower of Macau is the lotus. The lotus is always used as a symbol of the Macau Special Administrative Region. == See also == * Communications in Macau * Education in Macau * Transportation in Macau * Military of Macau * Crime and Police in Macau * Gambling in Macau * Macau Law *Legal system of Macau *List of universities in Macao *List of Macao-related topics == External links == *[http://www.gov.mo/egi/Portal/index.jsp Government of Macau] *[http://www.olamacauguide.com/ Guide to Macau] *[http://www.rthk.org.hk/rthk/tv/hkcc/20041220.html A documentary by RTHK on fifth anniversary of Macao SAR, in Cantonese] *[http://www.hongkong-macau.info/ Hongkong-Macau.info] *[http://www.ldsdolivetree.com/ Ramblings on Macau among others things] *[http://macau.blogharbor.com/blog/ macau.org.uk (an independent weblog about Macau)] *[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/country_profiles/4080105.stm BBC News - ''Regions and Territories: Macau''] *[http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geos/mc.html CIA World Factbook - ''Macau''] *[http://lcweb2.loc.gov/frd/cs/motoc.html Library of Congress - ''Country Study: Macau''] data as of August 2000 *[http://search.looksmart.com/p/browse/us1/us317916/us559898/us559967/us10023976/ LookSmart - ''Macau''] directory category *[http://dmoz.org/Regional/Asia/Macau/ Open Directory Project - ''Macau''] directory category *[http://dir.yahoo.com/Regional/Countries/China/Provinces__Regions__and_Municipalities/Macau/ Yahoo! - ''Macau''] directory category Macau Special territories Coastal cities Cities in China Former Portuguese colonies Pearl River Delta ka:მაკაო ms:Macau

Macau



This talk page reached 35K archived discussions from Talk Macau are moved to Talk:Macau/Archive1: *Not the Macaw Parrot *Two discussions of the spelling Macao/Macau and possible page move *The coat of arms *entry of NPOV history into the text *Query about delineation of the water boundary *subdivisions *universities page move TO this page == Dependent == Macau is not a dependent territory. It is a "special" territory. Both categories would be superfluous. Also, category of dependent territories does not seem to list individual territoires but is organized as a list of other nations dependents. This same reasoning applies to Hong Kong and I am pasting this same text there. (added by User:SchmuckyTheCat at 22:48, Mar 10, 2005) :Would you mind telling your definition of the term "dependent territory"? — User:InstantnoodUser_talk:Instantnood 23:19, Mar 10, 2005 (UTC) :* seems like we have a similar discussion going on here too: Talk:List_of_dependent_territories.--User:Huaiwei 05:48, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC) :* Yeah, that definition does not include Macau and Hong Kong. Dependent area, read sentence 2 of paragraph 2. HK and Macau are appropriate sub-national entities not dependencies. In Chinese governmental structure they are equal to a province, but of course they are "special" as well. Yes, this definition does not agree with the listings at List_of_subnational_entities and List of dependent territories but more importantly, it agrees with Political_divisions_of_China. User:SchmuckyTheCat 00:29, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC) :Thanks very much for making it clear, and paving the foundation for a discussion. The level of autonomy Hong Kong and Macao are enjoying are much higher than ordinary subnational entities. Yet they are not overseas, and theoretically do not have the right to be independent. They do demonstrate a certain degree of "a different order of separation", but at the same time they are nominally placed at the same level of provinces, as first-level divisions. :Afterall the definition at the second paragraph of dependent area is ambiguous, by words like "commonly", "in most cases", "typically" and "might be". In other words the definition in that article does not provide a simple and suitable-for-all rule of thumb. — User:InstantnoodUser_talk:Instantnood 01:00, Mar 11, 2005 (UTC) :*I mostly agree with you here, which is why dependent territory is a bad fit. A dependent territory seems more to be a possession or colony that does NOT enjoy a lot of autonomy even if it is thought of as being seperate from teh parent nation. That is why the category of "special" territory is a better fit. It is not only HK and Macau with special treatment by the main PRC government, remember. The PRC idea of federalism is weak in many regions. This does not make the SARs and autonomous regions independent, nor dependent, just special. Beijing is willing to be relaxed about their rules if they believe it unifies the entire country. User:SchmuckyTheCat 01:29, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC) :Autonomous regions of Chinas and special administrative regions are not alike. Autonomous regions are much more province-like. — User:InstantnoodUser_talk:Instantnood 01:40, Mar 11, 2005 (UTC) :* and neither are dependent. User:SchmuckyTheCat 02:01, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC) :::The special administrative regions fit into some of the definition of dependent territory, but not the autonomous regions. — User:InstantnoodUser_talk:Instantnood 07:33, Mar 11, 2005 (UTC) :* yeah right. You are merely comparing with the provinces in China thats why. Autonomous regions in other countries can have a much higher standing, and I dont see how an SAR cannot be called an autonomous territory.--User:Huaiwei 05:42, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC) :::It wasn't me who started compare special administrative regions with autonomous regions (of the PRC). ::::This is not an issue of who started that comparison. I am asking why are you comparing with the Chiense provinces. You can always pick a better alternative.--User:Huaiwei 10:23, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC) :::Could you please name a few autonomous territories of other countries which statuses are comparable to Hong Kong and Macao? — User:InstantnoodUser_talk:Instantnood 07:33, Mar 11, 2005 (UTC) ::::Which is why they are called SPECIAL administrative regions. I have maintained for a long time that they are in a category on their own, and that distinction is actually based on its level of AUTONOMY. What does "special administration" mean? It means it has special rights to administer itself. Now if that is not a form of autonomy, mind telling me what it is? A form of dependency?--User:Huaiwei 10:23, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC) :::* No, I'm tired of you baiting everything. They aren't independent. They aren't dependent. Their specifics are unique but the situation is not. They are first level divisions of the PRC with an independent arrangement for internal affairs. User:SchmuckyTheCat 08:08, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC) :::Then what are they? Could you tell why a [http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=%22Hong+Kong%22+%22dependency+status%22+-%22United+Kingdom%22+-%22Britain%22&meta= google search] gives more than 1800 hits? And [http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=%22special+administrative+region%22+%22dependency+status%22&meta= this search] gives more than 900 hits. — User:InstantnoodUser_talk:Instantnood 09:37, Mar 11, 2005 (UTC) ::::Yeah, so why dont you try other searches with different definitions?--User:Huaiwei 10:23, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC) :::My responsibility is to prove what I claimed is valid. — User:InstantnoodUser_talk:Instantnood 10:41, Mar 11, 2005 (UTC) ::::Again I ask. Are you interested in a resolution?--User:Huaiwei 10:52, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC) :::I do, but you never noticed and are never satisfied. If you are now interested, please read my response to Gangulf at Talk:List of dependent territories#To add? (10:29 Mar 5). — User:InstantnoodUser_talk:Instantnood 11:04, Mar 11, 2005 (UTC) ::::You assertion applies to yourself as well. You dont seem satisfied with other people's opinions, and neither do you seem to bother doing anything we ask of you, usually giving the excuse that it is "not your responsiblity" to do so? I suppose you also feel it is not your responsibility to stop conflicts, since you think you are not the one who ignites them?--User:Huaiwei 11:23, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC) :::Please go and read it first. — User:InstantnoodUser_talk:Instantnood 11:37, Mar 11, 2005 (UTC) ::::I have already replied, so of coz I have read it. So whats your point?--User:Huaiwei 12:15, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC) == The Three Revert Rule == This rule (3RR) says that no one should revert more than three times within 24 hours. At least two users have done so. This is a warning at the moment only. The next step would be a block of the offending editor for 24 hours. Anotehr possible step could be the protection of this page. This is invariably on the wrong version... User:Refdoc 23:28, 10 Mar 2005 (UTC) :Does an edit count then? It seems like the above measure came too late, and is now awarding the person who PERSISTED in the rv wars.--User:Huaiwei 23:47, 10 Mar 2005 (UTC) As a matter of fact, User:Huaiwei has made 5 reverts and was the one who started reverting. One of my four reverts was not a real revert, but an edit on the disambiguation notice. — User:InstantnoodUser_talk:Instantnood 23:53, Mar 10, 2005 (UTC) :As a matter of fact, I undid questionable edits your conducted which where under contention. It is hardly surprising for your to revert my reverts. So who started it?--User:Huaiwei 23:57, 10 Mar 2005 (UTC) I would suggets that both of you go and run a round around the block. I have warned everybody on this page who reverted more than three times and I will block everyone of those, when s/he reverts again. And I could not care less what the revert war is about, as I have not even read the article. Nor am I interested who started the matter, I am only interested in that it ends. Thanks for contributing to Wikipedia. User:Refdoc 00:00, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC) :Indeed I am going out to take a break. Goodness knows what is going to happen when I come back. And I still ask....is an edit counted as a revert? What happens when an ''edit'' war ensues?--User:Huaiwei 00:06, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC) :Thanks Refdoc. — User:InstantnoodUser_talk:Instantnood 00:11, Mar 11, 2005 (UTC) A revert happens when you revert to an earlier version, normally resulting a blank "diff". Complicating can be when you accommodate some edits but keep reverting others - the "diff" will show then the accepted edits and some interpretation of what is going on might be necessary. Fianlyy there are some people who think careful gaming of this rule is a smart move - rest assured, it is not. It is just a sign of deviousness and malice, making eventual blocks longer. And apart from all this normal editing can obviously continue. The page is not protected. Shoudl an edit war resume and shoudl I still be awake I will simply protect the page on a random version. User:Refdoc 00:15, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC) :Well thanks very much for that assurance. I suppose my concerns are more or less laid to rest, as raised in the other talkpage. If an attempt to combine small edits with the main purpose of actually removing an offending piece of text (as someone is obviously doing) is not considered a rv, I would be quite amused! ;) --User:Huaiwei 05:16, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC) This would be a revert trying to "game the rules". I would count it as one, if I figured this is what is happening. I am not sure how clear I need to be. I do hope that you can find a more adult solution to your problem here. I have looked at the list of both of your contributions - they are very long and many. So please continue to do ''productive'' entries rather than this silly game here. User:Refdoc 09:48, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC) I will take my watch of this and related articles now. Contact me if you need. User:Refdoc 14:49, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC) ==Dependency status of Macao== There is an ongoing debate at talk:Hong Kong#Dependency status of Hong Kong (and Macao). — User:InstantnoodUser_talk:Instantnood 22:33, Apr 22, 2005 (UTC) ==Spelling== The [http://www.gov.mo/egi/Portal/rkw/public/view/area.jsp?id=21 portal of the Macao government] has recently undergone renovation. The prevalent spelling in the English version is mostly "Macao", although "Macau" is used in the Portuguese version. I am not saying we should rename all the titles on Wikipedia, but at least we cannot say that "Macao" is the wrong spelling, and all titles should be standardised with "Macau". — User:InstantnoodUser_talk:Instantnood 05:37, May 28, 2005 (UTC) :And in fact the passports issued by the Macao government have Macao (in English) and Macau (in Portuguese) printed on the cover. — User:InstantnoodUser_talk:Instantnood 14:14, May 28, 2005 (UTC) :Interestingly, most of the sublinks from that site have Macau spelt as such even in English articles and websites.--User:Huaiwei 17:05, 28 May 2005 (UTC)

Macau



Main article: Macau Special administrative regions of the People's Republic of China People's Republic of China Asian dependencies China

Macãu



#redirect Macau


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Macaubal
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Macaulay,_Rose,_Dame
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Macaulay,_Thomas_Babington,_Baron
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Macau_Basic_Law
Macau_Daily_News
Macau_infobox
Macau_International_Airport
Macau_Jockey_Club
Macau_Law
Macau_national_football_team
Macau_newspapers
Macau_Peninsula
Macau_peninsula
Macau_SAR
Macau_SAR,_China
Macau_Security_Force
Macau_Security_Force
Macau_Sky_Tower
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Macau_Tower
Macau_Tower


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