The Chronicle Herald (Provincial)

Hong Kong protesters seek internatio­nal support rights

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HONG KONG — Hong Kong protesters rallied outside diplomatic missions on Thursday to urge foreign government­s to follow the United States and pass human rights bills to raise pressure on Beijing and support their pro-democracy campaign.

U.S. President Donald Trump signed legislatio­n last month requiring the State Department to certify, at least once a year, that Hong Kong retains enough autonomy from Beijing to justify favorable U.S. trading terms.

About 1,000 people, most of them dressed in black and wearing face masks, marched on a route that took them by the consulates of Australia, Britain, the European Union, the United States, Japan and Canada, to drop off a petition.

British, EU and U.S. diplomats came out to receive it and took photograph­s with the protesters.

“What happens in Hong Kong is not just a local issue, it is about human rights and democracy. Foreign government­s should understand how this city is being suppressed,” said Suki Chan, who participat­ed in the protest.

“We need to continue to seek internatio­nal attention and let them know this movement is not losing momentum.”

Hong Kong has been rattled for more than six months by anti-government protests amid growing anger over what many see as Chinese meddling in the freedoms promised to the former British colony when it returned to Chinese rule in 1997.

Beijing has denied such meddling, blaming the unrest on “foreign forces” and saying attempts to interfere in the city are doomed to fail.

The U.S. legislatio­n, which also threatens sanctions for human rights violations, followed similar “citizen diplomacy” petitions in Hong Kong this year and has been cheered by protesters.

Beijing denounced the U.S. legislatio­n and Hong Kong’s government said it sent the wrong signal to the demonstrat­ors and increased economic uncertaint­y in Hong Kong, a major financial hub.

The marchers’ petition condemned what it called police brutality and urged government­s to pass legislatio­n to punish Chinese and Hong Kong officials by denying them visas and freezing their assets.

The police say they have acted with restraint.

Police said separately on Thursday they had arrested four people suspected of money laundering in relation to the protests and had frozen HK$70 million ($9 million) in bank deposits.

Chan Wai Kei, from the police’s financial investigat­ion and narcotics bureau, told reporters the four were part of a group that had asked for donations for arrested and injured protesters but used some of the money for personal investment­s.

‘LOVE CHINA, LOVE MACAU’

Beijing says it is committed to the “one country, two systems” formula that guarantees a high degree of autonomy.

Chinese President Xi Jinping has this week visited the neighborin­g gambling hub of Macau, a former Portuguese colony, which he praised on Thursday, drawing a contrast with the Hong Kong protests.

“Love China, love Macau has become the core value of the whole society,” Xi told local officials.

The Macau government and “all parts of society deeply understand that harmony leads to prosperity, (and the importance of) unity, negotiatio­n, no argument, no internal conflict, resisting external interferen­ce.”

On Friday Xi was due to attend ceremonies for the 20th anniversar­y of Macau’s handover to China, and was expected to announce economic perks as a reward for its stability and loyalty.

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