Albuquerque Journal

Attack, thwarted speech in Hong Kong chaos

Chief Executive warns violence will erode the city’s ‘core values’

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HONG KONG — Assailants with hammers attacked a protest organizer and lawmakers shouting abuse forced Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam to abandon a speech in the legislatur­e in two dramas Wednesday that highlighte­d the chaos gripping the semi-autonomous Chinese territory after more than four months of anti-government unrest.

The attack on Jimmy Sham, a public face of the protest movement, was reported by his Civil Human Rights Front, which has organized large demonstrat­ions. Sham was on his way to an evening meeting when the four or five attackers pounced, leaving him with bloody head injuries, but conscious, the Front said on its Facebook page.

It suggested the assault was politicall­y motivated, linked “to a spreading political terror in order to threaten and inhibit the legitimate exercise of … rights.”

Earlier in the day, pro-democracy lawmakers yelling that she is “the mother of the mafia police” forced Lam to halt delivery of her annual policy address, causing her to walk out of the Legislativ­e Council.

The hostile reception was another slap in the face for the embattled chief executive grappling with demonstrat­ions and accompanyi­ng violence that have undermined her leadership, wrecked trust in the police, and opened festering bitterness between opponents and supporters of the protest movement.

As she started to speak, chanting lawmakers held up placards suggesting Lam has blood on her hands. They also used a projector to light up Lam’s face and the wall behind her with the protest movement’s key demands. One lawmaker wearing a mask of the face of Chinese President Xi Jinping tossed a placard as Lam walked out.

After two thwarted attempts, Lam fell back on Plan B: delivering the speech 75 minutes late by video link, standing ramrod-straight with China’s yellow-starred red flag to her right and Hong Kong’s flag on her left.

Describing the territory as going through “major crisis,” Lam appealed for its 7.5 million citizens to “cherish the city,” warning that “continued violence and spread of hatred will erode the core values of Hong Kong.”

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