Liangguang

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 This article is part of Alternatively.
Republic of Liangguang

Flag of Liangguang
Flag
Motto: TBD
TBD
Capital Guangzhou
Largest city Shenzhen
Official languages ChineseCantoneseZhuang
Recognised regional languages HakkaHokkienTeochewEnglishFrenchPortuguese
Demonym(s) Liangguanic
Government Federal parliamentary republic
• President
Tsai Shuying
Yang Jianhua
Legislature National Assembly
Independence from Qing dynasty
• Declared
12 February 1912
Currency Liangguanic wén (₩) (LGN)
Date format YYYY-MM-DD
Driving side right
Calling code +851
Internet TLD .lg

Liangguang, officially known as Republic of Liangguang, is a country located in East Asia. Liangguang is the TBDth largest country in the world by land area, comprising TBD square kilometres. It is composed of six federal provinces and one special administrative region. Guangzhou is the capital, while Shenzhen is the largest city.

Liangguang declared independence from Qing dynasty on February 12, 1912 after the end of Xinhai Revolution following the abdication of Xuantong Emperor. Luo Dechang became the interim president of the country until 1913, but he was elected on the same year under the Progressive Party. During the Chinese Civil War, the Communists attempt to invade Liangguang but they failed due to the stronger military support of the country. The country experienced economic miracle after the Second World War due to the improvement of the infrastructures and higher state of living on its citizens.

Liangguang is a federal parliamentary republic with a unicameral parliamentary government (National Assembly). The county has multi-party democracy with free elections. Liangguang became an ASEAN member in 2002 in spite of the country is geographically located in East Asia. Liangguang is also a member of the United Nations, the World Trade Organization, the East Asia Summit, the Non-Aligned Movement.

History

Early history

Independence

Liangguang declared independence from Qing dynasty on February 12, 1912 after the Xinhai Revolution. Luo Dechang became the interim president of the republic. The Liangguanic territory was only composed of the present-day states of Guangdong, Guangxi, and Hainan. The Nationalist Kuomintang government of Sun Yat-sen based in Guangzhou did not recognize Liangguang as a separate country and he insisted that Liangguang is a part of China. Luo questioned Chiang on his aim to unite China as a republic. The conflict between Luo and Sun resulted to the Liangguang Rebellion from 1913 to 1915. As a result, the country expand its territory to the present-day states of Yunnan and Guizhou. After Chiang lost in the war, the Kuomintang relocated to Nanjing due to the stronger presence of Liangguanic independence in Guangzhou.

Geography

Climate

Ecology

Politics

Government

Liangguang is a federal parliamentary republic. The Liangguanic government is divided into five branches: executive (cabinet), legislative (the unicameral National Assembly), judicial (Supreme Court and Constitutional Court), control (National Audit Commission), and examination (Civil Service Regulatory Commission).

The president is the head of state of the country and commander-in-chief of the armed forces, who is elected by popular vote for a maximum of 3 three-year terms on the same ticket as the vice-president. The president appoints the prime minister and its cabinet members. The former is officially the President of the Cabinet; members are responsible for policy and administration.

Law and justice

Administrative divisions

Federal states

Name Flag Population Area Capital Legislature Governor
Canton
Flag of Canton (Alternatively).svg
TBD TBD km2 Guangzhou Legislative Council TBD
Fujian
Flag of Fujian (Alternatively).svg
TBD TBD km2 Fuzhou Federal Congress TBD
Guangxi
Flag of Guangxi (Alternatively).svg
TBD TBD km2 Nanning Federal Assembly TBD
Hainan
Flag of Hainan (Alternatively).svg
TBD TBD km2 Haikou Legislative Council TBD
Hunan TBD TBD km2 Changsa Consultative Legislature TBD
Jiangxi TBD TBD km2 Nangchang Legislative Assembly TBD
Juzhou TBD TBD km2 Guiyang Legislative Commission TBD
Nanli TBD TBD km2 Beiyang Legislative Council TBD
Yunnan
Flag of Yunnan (Alternatively).svg
TBD TBD km2 Kunming Federal Congress TBD

Special autonomous region

Name Flag Population Area Seat of government Legislature Head of state
Guangzhouwan TBD km2 Zhanjiang Legislative Assembly
Hong Kong
Flag of Hong Kong.svg
TBD km2 Tamar Legislative Council
Macau
Flag of Macau.svg
TBD km2 Legislative Assembly

Military

Diplomacy

Economy

Education

Healthcare

Energy

Transportation

Science and technology

Demographics

Ethnicity

Languages

Religions

Largest cities

Culture

Literature

Visual arts

Music

Media

Liangguang Daily, Blue Sun News, The Guangzhou Times, Southern Morning Post, and Liangguanic Standard are the major newspaper companies in the country. Almost all of the newspapers in the country have Chinese, Cantonese, and Zhuang editions as these three are the official languages. Liangguang Economic Times is the best-selling financial newspaper. Aside by headline news, most of the country's newspaper contents are current affairs, local stories and lifestyle. Showbiz industry in the country are rarely tackled in the newspaper.

Liangguang has six major television stations: the government-owned LCTV and PIS, and commercial-owned LTV, SBN, and RBS. LCTV was launched in 1965, it was the first free-to-air television station and it is owned by the government. While LTV was launched in 1967 and the first commercial television station in the country. Paid cable and satellite television have also been widespread. The production of Liangguang's soap drama, comedy series and variety shows have reached mass audiences outside Liangguang especially in East and Southeast Asia.

Sports

Holidays