Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Protesters keep up Hong Kong drive

Activists demand formal withdrawal of proposed measure on extraditio­n

- KATIE TAM AND CHRISTOPHE­R BODEEN

HONG KONG — Hong Kong protest leaders opposed to the administra­tion of Chief Executive Carrie Lam said Tuesday that they will continue their demonstrat­ions, even after Lam declared the effort to amend a highly contentiou­s extraditio­n bill “dead.”

Protesters are persisting in their demands for the bill to be formally withdrawn and an investigat­ion opened into heavy-handed tactics used by police against demonstrat­ors. Hundreds of thousands have joined the monthlong protests, expressing growing concerns about the steady erosion of civil rights in the semiautono­mous Chinese territory.

“We cannot find the word ‘dead’ in any of the laws in Hong Kong or in any legal proceeding­s in the Legislativ­e Council,” protest leaders Jimmy Sham and Bonnie Leung said in statements in English and Cantonese.

“So how can the government tell us that we should preserve our rule of law, when [Lam] herself does not use the principle of the rule of law,” the statements said.

The protest leaders also said Lam was being hypocritic­al in claiming to have met demonstrat­ors’ demands without actually speaking to them directly.

“Instead, she should really stand out and talk to the young protesters,” Leung said. “The young protesters have been out in the street outside her house, outside government headquarte­rs, for weeks, roaring to be heard.”

Details about future protest actions will be announced at a later time, Leung said.

Lam acknowledg­ed at a news conference earlier Tuesday that there were “lingering doubts about the government’s sincerity or worries about whether it would seek to bring the legislatio­n back for a vote.” But she said: “I reiterate here, there is no such plan. The bill is dead.”

The protests against the proposed extraditio­n legislatio­n have given voice to concerns that Hong Kong is losing the freedoms guaranteed to it when the former British colony was returned to China in 1997.

The legislatio­n would allow criminal suspects to be extradited to mainland China. Critics fear suspects would face unfair and politicize­d trials, and that opponents of China’s ruling Communist Party would be targeted.

In the most recent protest on Sunday, tens of thousands of people, chanting “Free Hong Kong” and some carrying British colonial-era flags, marched toward a highspeed railway station that connects Hong Kong to the Chinese mainland. They said they wanted to carry their protest message to those on the mainland, where staterun media outlets have not covered the protests widely but have focused instead on clashes with police and on property damage.

On July 1, the 22nd anniversar­y of Hong Kong’s hand-over from Britain back to China, a peaceful march drew hundreds of thousands of people but was overshadow­ed by an assault on the territory’s legislativ­e building. A few hundred demonstrat­ors shattered thick glass panels to enter the building and wreaked havoc for three hours.

Protesters are also demanding an independen­t investigat­ion into police actions on June 12, when officers used tear gas and rubber bullets to disperse crowds blocking major streets.

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