The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Anti-Beijing protesters march in HK

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HONG KONG: 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.

Demonstrat­ors scuffled with police at the end of the march and some who refused to leave the protest area were carried or escorted out by security guards.

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 pro-democracy activists.

Campaigner Joshua Wong, who joinedthou­sandsofpro­testersatt­he march Monday, said suppressio­n by China’s Communist Party government had worsened in 2017.

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 so-called ‘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, with plans for a joint immigratio­n checkpoint that would see mainland police and other officials based in the Hong Kong terminus.

The station is on Hong Kong’s famous harbourfro­nt in Kowloon, not on the border with the mainland further to the north.

China’s top legislativ­e body approved the project last week.

The final stage before implementa­tion is a vote by Hong Kong’s legislativ­e council, which is weighted towards Beijing.

Pro-democracy lawmakers, campaigner­s and some in the city’s legal community say the plan is a violation of Hong Kong’s mini-constituti­on, the Basic Law, which stipulates national laws do not apply to Hong Kong with a few exceptions.

Hong Kong’s pro-Beijing government argues the rail set-up is for the convenienc­e of passengers and both local and Chinese authoritie­s insist it does not impinge on the city’s autonomy.

“I find it ironic that the legally illiterate are explaining what the rule of law is,” said office worker Patrick Tang, 48, of Beijing’s ruling on the rail link. — AFP

 ??  ?? A man is removed by members of security as he takes part in a NewYear’s Day pro-democracy rally in Hong Kong at the recently reopened Civic Square. — AFP photo
A man is removed by members of security as he takes part in a NewYear’s Day pro-democracy rally in Hong Kong at the recently reopened Civic Square. — AFP photo

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