The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Determined Hong Kong protesters head home before tense anniversar­ies

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WASHINGTON: Prominent Hong Kong protesters were flying home from Washington Saturday night buoyed by internatio­nal support and determined to press on with their struggle well beyond two looming anniversar­ies.

In an interview with AFP, Joshua Wong, 22, and pop star Denise Ho, 42, downplayed the personal toll of standing up to authoritar­ian China and its proBeijing leadership in the global financial hub.

They have become the faces of a protest movement which is leaderless and whose activists take to the streets masked, partly to protect themselves from reprisals in their push for universal suffrage and an independen­t inquiry into alleged police abuses.

Wong and Ho are returning to Hong Kong after raising awareness in the United States, Germany, Taiwan and Australia about the pro-democracy protests that have continued for more than three months despite escalating rhetoric from Beijing.

Next Saturday is the fifth anniversar­y of the 79-day Umbrella Movement, which Wong helped spearhead after Beijing rejected a call for universal voting rights in the former British colony.

Ho said she worries about what might happen around that date because police have been rejecting requests for marches even though ‘it is in our rights to peacefully assemble.’

By not allowing the rallies, authoritie­s are violating the Basic Law that underpins the city’s semi-autonomous status, she said.

“I do think this is a situation that might go on for quite a bit of time, and one of the ways to stop it is probably really to get the internatio­nal communitie­s come together to voice their concerns over this issue,” Ho, short-haired and wearing a military-style jacket and heavy boots, told AFP in an interview.

Three days after the Umbrella Movement commemorat­ion will be the 70th anniversar­y of the founding of the People’s Republic of China, but Ho said she does not think China’s communist rulers would want any clashes on that day. Nor would they deploy People’s Liberation Army troops, she said.

“But then you have to understand that these Chinese police are already here, they are already infiltrati­ng the Hong Kong police force,” said Ho, whose music has been banned in mainland China for her activism.

“We do expect there will be a huge number of people who would be going on the streets” to protest on October 1, she said.

TheHongKon­gdemonstra­tions, which drew millions, began against a now scrapped plan to allow extraditio­ns to the Chinese mainland.

They grew into a wider campaign for democracy, fueled by animosity towards the police, with hardcore protesters turning to violence.

Under the terms of the 1997 handover deal, the city has rights and liberties that do not exist on the mainland, including an independen­t judiciary and freedom of speech, but demonstrat­ors say freedoms are being eroded by Beijing.

In Washington, Wong testified with Ho before the US Congress in support of a bill aimed at defending civil rights in Hong Kong. Wearing a sports coat over his T-Shirt, Wong told AFP it is significan­t ‘and remarkable’ that the US administra­tion ‘really pay much more attention to Hong Kong protests compared to five years ago.’

Part of the reason, he said, is the much larger scale that has seen thousands of tear gas rounds fired, 1,500 activists arrested and around 200 — including himself — prosecuted. — AFP

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Wong (right) and other activists unfurl a banner containing messages, written during a rally outside the US consulate in Hong Kong.
— AFP photo Wong (right) and other activists unfurl a banner containing messages, written during a rally outside the US consulate in Hong Kong.

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