The Scotsman

Xi Jinping met by democracy protests on Hong Kong visit

- By KELVIN CHAN In Hong Kong newsdeskts@scotsman.com

Chinese president Xi Jinping landed in Hong Kong yesterday to mark the 20th anniversar­y of Beijing taking control of the former British colony, accompanie­d by a formidable layer of security and showing showed little patience for pro-democracy protests.

After stepping off his Air China plane, Mr Xi said he envisioned “stable developmen­t” of Hong Kong’s “one country, two systems” framework.

Pro-democracy activists fear Beijing is underminin­g the principle – agreed upon when Britain handed over the city back to China – which guarantees Hong Kong can mostly run its own affairs and keep civil liberties including free speech until 2047.

Mr Xi’s three-day visit culminates tomorrow when he will oversee an inaugurati­on ceremony for the Asian financial hub’s new leader, Carrie Lam.

Pro-democracy activists staged protests ahead of his visit and more were expected, including an annual march through the streets tomorrow that has drawn big crowds in the past. Hong Kong authoritie­s were taking no chances with disruption­s and deployed heavy security across the city.

Helicopter­s hovered overhead and police and barricades lined the streets around a downtown convention centre and hotel complex where Mr Xi was expected to spend most of his time. Officers questioned passers-by taking photos of the few protests allowed near the area. Authoritie­s even glued the gaps between sidewalk paving stones in an effort to prevent them from being torn up and thrown by protesters. Three pro-democracy groups said 26 of their members were arrested on Wednesday evening on public nuisance charges for staging a sit-in at a giant flower sculpture near the complex. They were still detained hours after Mr Xi arrived. Police have the power to hold them up to 48 hours.

Those arrested included Joshua Wong, the young activist who helped lead 2014’s “Umbrella Movement” protests, and Nathan Law, another student protest leader who was elected to the legislatur­e last year.

Mr Xi is visiting to mark the 20th anniversar­y of Hong Kong’s handover, when Britain ceded control of its colony to China at the stroke of midnight on 30 June, 1997.

“It’s been nine years since I last set foot in this place. I’m thrilled,” Mr Xi said on the airport tarmac. “Hong Kong has been tugging away at my heart,” he said, adding that the anniversar­y of Hong Kong’s “return to the motherland” tomorrow is “a big deal, a joyous occasion for the country and for Hong Kong.”

He said one of the purposes of his trip is to plan for Hong Kong’s future.

 ??  ?? 0 Tight security and a welcome from pro-beijing wellwisher­s greeted Xi Jinping yesterday but pro-democracy protesters are planning a less friendly welcome
0 Tight security and a welcome from pro-beijing wellwisher­s greeted Xi Jinping yesterday but pro-democracy protesters are planning a less friendly welcome

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