The Asian Age

Protest against law of mainland China

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Hong Kong, Jan. 1: Angry protesters marched through Hong Kong Monday against what they described as suppressio­n by Beijing, days after Chinese authoritie­s ruled that part of a city rail station would come under mainland law.

Semi- autonomous Hong Kong has been ruled under a "one country, two systems" deal since Britain returned it to China in 1997 and enjoys rights unseen on the mainland, including freedom of speech and an independen­t judiciary.

But a string of recent incidents have fuelled concern over the erosion of its autonomy and rule of law, including the jailing of prominent prodemocra­cy activists.

Campaigner Joshua Wong, who joined thousands of protesters at the march Monday, said suppressio­n by China’s Communist Party government had worsened in 2017.

Mr Wong, 21, was jailed in August over his role in the Umbrella Movement mass pro- democracy protests of 2014 and is on bail pending an appeal against his six- month sentence.

“In 2018, I hope that every Hong Konger can become an avenger, and win back the core values eroded by Beijing,” Wong told AFP.

Many of the protesters were angry at the socalled “co- location” agreement, which would bring part of a new rail terminus in the heart of Hong Kong under mainland law.

The high- speed link to the sprawling southern mainland cities of Shenzhen and Guangzhou is due to open this year.

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