Kuwait Times

Thousands march again for democracy in HK

-

HONG KONG: Thousands of pro-democracy protesters took to the streets of Hong Kong yesterday for the first time since mass demonstrat­ions shut down parts of the city for more than two months. A sea of yellow umbrellas-the symbol of the campaign-moved slowly through central Hong Kong with crowds shouting for “true universal suffrage”.

But numbers were well below expectatio­ns with 13,000 attending according to organizers­just over a quarter of the 50,000 they had hoped for. “Today’s protest wasn’t a small one. It was smaller than we expected, but it’s wrong to say Hong Kongers have given in to fake democracy,” said organizer Daisy Chan.

Demands and tensions

Police said up to 8,800 people had joined the march, a fraction of the tens of thousands who gathered at the peak of the protests. Authoritie­s have made no concession­s to activists’ demands and tensions remain high in the semiautono­mous Chinese territory. Police warned ahead of the rally that demonstrat­ors were likely to once again try to occupy some of Hong Kong’s main roads, which were cleared of tented camps in December.

But by late afternoon the march remained peaceful, with no sign that the crowds-including many people carrying yellow balloons-planned to take back the streets. “We don’t have a plan (to reoccupy). If others want to do it, they will have to do it themselves,” student leader Alex Chow said.

Despite the disappoint­ing turnout, there was a sense of determinat­ion among demonstrat­ors. “We just want to express our frustratio­n with the government in Hong Kong,” said protester Ronnie Chan, who is in his 40s and works in sales and marketing. “We understand there is very little we can do, but if we don’t speak out nothing will change.” The pro-democracy rallies drew around 100,000 at their height and saw intermitte­nt violent clashes with police, but public support faded as the weeks dragged by.

‘Tired of politics’

China has promised Hong Kongers the right for the first time to vote for their next chief executive in 2017. But it ruled that nominees must be vetted by a pro-Beijing committee, a proposal which has been heavily criticized by activists. The founders of the pro-democracy movement including Benny Tai, along with teenage activist Joshua Wong and other student leaders, urged residents to keep fighting as they joined yesterday’s rally. “If we don’t dream, we don’t have hope. We should persist then we will succeed,” said Tai. Wong warned against accepting universal suffrage within the restrictio­ns of Beijing’s framework. “I hope people understand that if we take that now, it will be forever,” he said. But political analyst Sonny Lo said residents were exhausted from protests over political reform. “At this moment, members of the public are tired of politics. The democrats have to strategize very carefully,” said Lo, head of the social sciences department at the Hong Kong Institute of Education. Hong Kong’s government is urging the public to support Beijing’s electoral plan, which needs the backing of two-thirds of the city’s legislatur­e to be passed. Lam Woon-kwong, convener of the Executive Council or cabinet, warned campaigner­s to accept Beijing’s offer.

“You can’t threaten the central authoritie­s,” he told a radio program yesterday. “If we can have consensus to have universal suffrage in 2017 first and democratiz­e further later, it would be a more pragmatic approach.” But for some protesters, backing down is not an option. “I’m just doing my bit. Some people may have compromise­d, but I definitely will not,” said one father of two who gave his name as Alvin. Protests in Hong Kong pre-date the Occupy movement-last July hundreds of thousands demonstrat­ed a month before Beijing ruled on political reform. — AFP

 ??  ?? HONG KONG: Demonstrat­ors distribute leaflets before a march for Democracy. — AFP
HONG KONG: Demonstrat­ors distribute leaflets before a march for Democracy. — AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait