Hong Kong protests escalate

03 Oct 2014  2036 | World Travel News

HONG KONG A student leader vowed Wednesday to step up Hong Kong’s huge pro-democracy protests — including a possible occupation of government offices — unless the city’s leader steps down within a day, as support for the movement grew around the world.
The announcement came as tens of thousands of defiant demonstrators poured onto the streets on China’s National Day.
“If our chief executive and the central government (China) do not respect and listen to our people’s opinion, we will consider having different operating actions in future days, including occupying other places like important government offices,” said Agnes Chow of the Scholarism student movement.
Chow said the deadline for chief executive, Leung Chun-ying, was “today or tomorrow”.
Chan Kin-man, co-founder of the pro-democracy Occupy Central movement, which co-organised the demonstrations, said any escalation would be “an action initiative by the students” and called for it to be peaceful.
But he ruled out any dialogue with Leung.
“We can talk to anyone in the government except him… resign for the sake of Hong Kong.”
Leung has faced mounting calls to step down and has been criticised for failing to engage with protesters, after their “Umbrella Revolution” campaign for unfettered universal suffrage sparked the biggest civil unrest in the semi-autonomous Chinese city for decades.
Wednesday was a holiday marking the 65th anniversary of the founding of Communist China, and Thursday is also a holiday in Hong Kong.
As evening fell, thousands crammed into a 1 km stretch between the Central business district and Wanchai.
The Wall Street Journal reported that Leung’s administration is planning to sit out the protests — hoping they fizzle out rather than trying to clear them by force — on Beijing’s orders.
“Beijing has set a line to C.Y. (Leung). You cannot open fire,” the newspaper quoted a source familiar with the matter as saying. “You must halt it in a peaceful way.”
- International support -
International support for the protesters has been growing — a Facebook group calling itself “United for Democracy: Global Solidarity with Hong Kong” said it was planning events from Australia to the United States.
More than 1,000 sympathisers gathered in the Taiwanese capital Wednesday night, while 80 attended a candlelight vigil in Singapore.
South African Nobel peace laureate Desmond Tutu backed the protests, criticising police for trying to suppress them and calling on Bejing not to “fear the will of its people”.
But in mainland China authorities have detained more than a dozen activists and questioned as many as 60 others who expressed support for the Hong Kong crowds, rights groups said.
After an early-morning flag-raising ceremony in Hong Kong to mark National Day, Leung chinked glasses of champagne with Chinese military and civilian officials including Zhang Xiaoming, Beijing’s top man in Hong Kong.
Protesters outside booed as two helicopters flew overhead, one bearing a large Chinese flag and the other a smaller Hong Kong banner.
Beijing has been left grappling with one of the biggest challenges to its rule over the city at a time when the Communist Party is cracking down hard on dissent on the mainland.
The most intense civil unrest Hong Kong has experienced since its 1997 handover from British rule was sparked by Beijing’s decision in August to restrict who can stand for the city’s top post.
Hong Kongers will be able to vote for their next chief executive in 2017 but only two or three candidates vetted by a pro-Beijing committee will be allowed to stand.
Protesters call this fake democracy. They have two demands — that Leung step down and that Beijing rescind its insistence that candidates for future leaders be vetted.
The protests have paralysed much of the city’s central financial district and two other areas, disrupting surface transport and shutting down businesses.
Close to tears on Wednesday afternoon, Occupy’s Chan apologised to residents for the disruption and asked for tolerance.
“With this short-term inconvenience, we hope to bring about a system that is more fair,” he said.
While students have been at the forefront of the demonstrations in Hong Kong, others have joined them, particularly since police tear-gassed protesters on Sunday night and triggered an outpouring of support for the crowds.

sourced:ttrweekly.com

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