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Sunday, September 29, 2019

Pigeons, drones and balloons banned in Beijing so they don't disrupt National Day

A Chinese paramilitary policeman stands guard at Tiananmen Square in Beijing on April 8, 2019. Thirty years after the crackdown on Tiananmen protesters, the tanks that lined Beijing's central avenue have been replaced by countless surveillance cameras perched like hawks on lampposts to keep the population in check.

AFP | Getty Images

Ahead of China's 70th anniversary celebrations on Tuesday, Beijing issued a ban on flying kites, drones and captive pigeons over the capital as the country prepared for one of its largest military parades ever.

President Xi Jinping will be overseeing a massive parade of the armed forces through central Beijing on Tuesday. As part of the ceremony on Oct. 1, which marks 70 years of the Communist Party's rule, Xi will address more than 100,000 people in what state media has called a "mass pageantry."

The announcement to ban flying objects was made more than two weeks ago.

Beijing has been on high security alert, as the capital prepares for the big day. Huge red banners rallying the people for the "China dream" have been hung on buildings throughout the city.

The country's Great Firewall — its online censorship system — has also been strengthened as it continues to place tight controls on internet access.

In mid September, Chinese news agency Xinhua News reported that Tiananmen Square was closed to visitors a few weekends ahead of the festivities.

The square holds great symbolism as it was where founding father Mao Zedong announced the founding of the People's Republic of China seventy years ago. It was also where a violent crackdown on protesters took place 30 years ago.

Some roads and subway stations were also reportedly closed, as was access to buildings along the parade route.

— The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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