Dayton Daily News

Protesters in Hong Kong take message to tourists

- Amy Qin ©2019 The New York Times

— Protesters held HONG KONG another march in Hong Kong on Sunday, the first major action since a small group of demonstrat­ors broke into the city’s legislatur­e last Monday in a dramatic escalation of recent tensions.

It was the latest in a series of protests that have roiled Hong Kong since the city’s leaders tried to push through a contentiou­s bill that would allow extraditio­n to mainland China. The protests, which organizers say have drawn up to 2 million people, have been mostly peaceful, apart from a few violent confrontat­ions between police officers and demonstrat­ors.

Organizers said about 230,000 turned out for Sunday’s protests. Police said the turnout was 56,000 at its peak.

Tensions culminated last week when an offshoot group of young protesters smashed their way into a legislativ­e building and ransacked the premises, as hundreds of thousands of people marched peacefully in a concurrent protest elsewhere in the city.

Late Sunday night, the police and dozens of protesters clashed in the Mong Kok District a couple of hours after the march nearby had ended. The demonstrat­ors sought to occupy a major road, but the police declared it an unlawful assembly and began warning protesters to leave. Officers with batons, shields and helmets then began clearing out the crowd. At least one man was seen being taken away by the police.

Though the extraditio­n bill has been suspended, the protesters’ demands have broadened to include a call for more democratic reforms such as universal suffrage, in addition to a full withdrawal of the bill, an independen­t inquiry into police violence toward protesters and amnesty for the protesters.

Hong Kong, a semiautono­mous Chinese territory, has a separate political and judicial system and is governed based on a principle known as “one country, two systems.”

But in recent years, as Beijing has grown more autocratic and increased efforts to integrate Hong Kong with the mainland, many here have become alarmed about the erosion of the city’s once-robust protection­s for civic freedoms and rule of law.

While previous marches have been held in the downtown financial and business districts of Hong Kong Island, the march Sunday is the first to take place in Kowloon, an area of Hong Kong that is attached to the Chinese mainland. It is being billed as an opportunit­y to engage with mainland Chinese in the hope that they will back the protesters.

The Hong Kong protests have been heavily censored in the mainland, where they are portrayed by government officials and the state news media as being organized by “foreign forces” and spearheade­d by violent “extreme radicals.”

Josie Kwok, 18, said she saw the protest Sunday as an opportunit­y to reset the tone following the clashes last week.

“I think the most important thing today is for the protests to be peaceful,” she said. “We want to show mainlander­s that Hong Kong isn’t China, and we want to show other Hong Kongers and the world that we are peaceful so we can gain their support.”

The march began in the late afternoon in Tsim Sha Tsui, a shopping area popular with mainland Chinese tourists, and ended at the West Kowloon railway station, which is the terminus of a high-speed line to the Chinese city of Guangzhou.

Mainland tourists, many carrying shopping bags, watched and took photograph­s as the protesters marched past designer stores.

Sunny Yang, 37, a mainlander who has lived in Hong Kong for nine years, said she had always felt somewhat “awkward” about the protests, which have at times taken on an anti-China tone. But seeing the scale and largely peaceful nature of the protests this time around, she said, left her feeling quite “positive.”

 ?? LAM YIK FEI / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Protesters clash with police after a march near the Canton Road tourist shopping district in Hong Kong. Sunday’s march began at a shopping area popular with mainland Chinese tourists and headed toward a high-speed rail station that connects Hong Kong to the mainland.
LAM YIK FEI / THE NEW YORK TIMES Protesters clash with police after a march near the Canton Road tourist shopping district in Hong Kong. Sunday’s march began at a shopping area popular with mainland Chinese tourists and headed toward a high-speed rail station that connects Hong Kong to the mainland.

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