AFTER TOUGH YEAR, HONG KONG DEMOCRACY PROTESTERS SOUND WARNING TO CHINA ON NEW YEAR'S DAY
HONG KONG (Reuters) - After a year that saw democracy advocates in Hong
Kong jailed and ousted from public office, thousands marched through the
streets of Hong Kong on New Year’s Day to warn China not to meddle further in
the city’s affairs and undermine its autonomy.
Over the past year, Hong Kong, a former British colony which returned
to Chinese rule in 1997, has experienced what critics and pro-democracy
activists describe as an intensifying assault on its autonomy by China’s
Communist Party leaders.
This is despite Beijing’s promises to grant the city wide-ranging
freedoms including an independent judiciary, under a so-called “one country,
two systems” framework.
Besides the controversial jailing of several prominent young activists
for unlawful assembly over the massive 2014 “Occupy” pro-democracy protests,
authorities also ejected six pro-democracy lawmakers from the legislature for
failing to take proper oaths of office.
The city’s reputation as one of Asia’s most robust legal jurisdictions
has also come under a cloud amidst accusations of a politicization of certain
legal cases.
The protesters, who included many middle-aged and elderly citizens,
held up banners and chanted the march’s main theme to “Protect Hong Kong”
during a walk of several kilometers to the city’s government headquarters.
Others decried an unprecedented move by China’s parliament last week
that said part of a high-speed railway station being built in Hong Kong would
be regarded as mainland territory governed by mainland laws.
“We are here to tell the government that we will not give up,” said
Joshua Wong, one of the democracy activists jailed last year, but who is now
out on bail pending an appeal.
“We have encountered many difficulties last year, including some of us
being sued and jailed, but we will stand with Hong Kong people. We will fight
for the rule of law, fight for Hong Kong, fight for the future, fight for the
next generations.”
Two protesters who dressed up as People’s Liberation Army soldiers said
they were concerned about the reach of China’s security apparatus. Others
called for full democracy as the only lasting means to safeguard the city’s way
of life.
The organizers of the march said some 10,000 people had showed up.
Police, however, put the figure at 6,200.
The demonstration was largely peaceful, though some protesters who
tried to later gather in a forecourt of the government’s headquarters
skirmished briefly with security guards.
The so-called “Civic Square” was where the 2014 pro-democracy protests
first kicked off when a group of protesters stormed over a fence and faced off
with local police.
Despite the defiance on show, some said they feared Hong Kong would
continue to be squeezed by Beijing.
“Everyone’s doing what they can,” said Andy Lau who was among the
marchers. “If we have the right to demonstrate then we should. But I‘m not
feeling positive. I think things will get worse.”
The Hong Kong government, in a statement, said it “fully respects the
right of Hong Kong people to take part in processions and their freedom of
expression”.
China’s leader Xi Jinping has said that while Hong Kong enjoys a high
degree of autonomy under “one country, two systems”, Beijing still holds
supreme authority over the city and won’t tolerate any challenge to its
authority.
SOURCE : REUTERS
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