The Province

Hong Kong braces for mass protest

For first time since August, police have granted permission for marchers to take to the streets

- — North American Business Report

HONG KONG — Hong Kong was gearing up for a mass rally on Sunday that is expected to gauge support for pro-democracy demonstrat­ions in the Chinese-ruled city as the government appealed to people to express their views peacefully.

Police gave the green light to Civil Human Rights Front (CHRF) — organizer of largely peaceful million-strong marches in June — to hold the rally, the first time the group has been granted permission for a protest since Aug. 18.

Activists will march from Victoria Park in the shopping district of Causeway Bay to Chater Road near the heart of the financial hub, the route of similar protests, most of which started out peacefully but later became violent.

The protests escalated in June over a now-shelved extraditio­n bill that would have allowed people to be sent to mainland China for trial, but have now evolved into broader calls for democracy, among other demands.

The government said in a statement on Saturday it has “learned its lesson and will humbly listen to and accept criticism.”

Hong Kong’s new police commission­er, Chris Tang, said his force would take a flexible approach to demonstrat­ions, using “both the hard and soft approach.”

The former British colony has been rocked by more than 900 demonstrat­ions, procession­s and public meetings since June, with many ending in violent confrontat­ions between protesters and police, who have responded at times with tear gas and rubber bullets.

Protesters have torched vehicles and buildings, hurled petrol bombs at police stations and trains, dropped debris from bridges onto traffic below and vandalized shopping malls and university campuses, raising questions about how and when the unrest can be brought to an end.

Demonstrat­ors are angry at what they see as Chinese meddling in freedoms promised to Hong Kong when the then British colony returned to Chinese rule in 1997.

Beijing denies meddling and has condemned the unrest and blamed foreign government­s, including the United States and former colonial power Britain, of interferin­g in the country’s internal affairs.

The chairman and president of the American Chamber of Commerce (AmCham) in Hong Kong were separately denied entry to the neighbouri­ng Chinese-ruled city of Macau on Saturday after being detained by immigratio­n officials.

The internatio­nal financial hub has enjoyed relative calm since local elections on Nov. 24 delivered an overwhelmi­ng victory to pro-democracy candidates.

Nearly 6,000 people have been arrested in the protests since June, more than 30 per cent aged between 21 and 25.

(The government has) learned its lesson and will humbly listen to and accept criticism.”

 ?? REUTERS ?? Pro-Beijing supporters wave Chinese flags at a rally in Hong Kong on Saturday.
REUTERS Pro-Beijing supporters wave Chinese flags at a rally in Hong Kong on Saturday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada