The Freeman

Anti-Beijing protesters march in HK

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HONG KONG — Angry protesters marched through Hong Kong yesterday 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 joined thousands of protesters at the 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 prodemocra­cy 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 "colocation" 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 miniconsti­tution, 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 setup is for the convenienc­e of passengers and both local and Chinese authoritie­s insist it does not impinge on the city's autonomy.

 ?? AGENCE FRANCE PRESSE ?? A string of recent incidents have fuelled concern over the erosion of Hong Kong’s autonomy and rule of law.
AGENCE FRANCE PRESSE A string of recent incidents have fuelled concern over the erosion of Hong Kong’s autonomy and rule of law.

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