Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Hong Kongers mark half year of protest movement Pepe and protest pig memes come to life at HK rally

MASSIVE RALLY Hundreds of thousands march in the city in biggest turnout for months

- Agencies letters@hindustant­imes.com

HONG KONG : Hundreds of thousands of protesters marched through Hong Kong to mark Human Rights Day and press for greater democracy in the city in the biggest rally in about six months.

Protesters still clogged the main streets of the city hours after the masses began to leave the gathering point in Victoria Park in Causeway Bay and wind their way to the Central district. The rally was the first Civil Human Rights Front-organised event in four months to be given the go-ahead by the government.

Earlier in the day, police said they arrested 11 people and uncovered an arms cache in a raid. Officers seized a semi-automatic pistol, bullet-proof jackets, retractabl­e batons and pepper spray in the raid, which they suspect would have been used by an “extreme” group of people trying to attack police or “create chaos” during the rally, they said at a press conference, citing intelligen­ce reports.

More than six months of violent protests that started because of a proposed law that would have allowed extraditio­ns to mainland

China have developed into a movement for greater democracy.

The activists are also calling for an independen­t inquiry into police conduct during the unrest.

HK AMCHAM OFFICIALS DENIED MACAU ENTRY The chairman and the president of the American Chamber of Commerce in Hong Kong were denied entry to the Chinese city of

Macau on Saturday, a spokespers­on for the organisati­on said.

Chairman Robert Grieves and president Tara Joseph were separately prevented from entering the neighbouri­ng semi-autonomous city on their way to the American Chamber of Commerce (Amcham) Macau Ball, an Amcham spokespers­on said in a statement.

Both were given “no reason” for being turned away, they added, with the two returning to Hong Kong after being made to sign a statement that they agreed not to pursue entry into Macau.

Amcham said they were “puzzled” as to why the two were refused entry to the annual social gathering.

“We hope that this is just an over reaction to the current events and that internatio­nal business can constructi­vely forge ahead,” the statement added.

HONGKONG: Among the sea of faces on Hong Kong’s streets on Sunday were more than one hundred people wearing quirky oversized animal masks -- a band of activists bringing popular protest internet memes to life.

Hong Kong’s democracy movement is largely leaderless and organised online. LIHKG, a local Reddit-like web forum that serves as a virtual command centre for the movement, is filled with memes and a host of animal cartoon characters that have been embraced by activists.

The most popular are a cute pig and a shiba inu dog, who often appear dressed in the movement’s ubiquitous yellow tradesman helmets. The other is Pepe the Frog, who carries none of the far-right baggage he does in the West, used by Hong Kong protesters as an irreverent symbol of their dissatisfa­ction with Beijing’s rule. On Sunday a group of activists joined the crowds wearing colourful Pepe, pig and shiba masks, in stark relief against a vast forest of umbrellas. AFP

 ??  ?? Pro-democracy protesters take part in a march in Hong Kong on Sunday.
AP
Pro-democracy protesters take part in a march in Hong Kong on Sunday. AP
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India