The Borneo Post

Young Hongkonger­s boycott Tiananmen vigil

- June 5, 2016

HONG KONG: Young activists will turn their backs on Hong Kong’s commemorat­ion of the bloody Tiananmen Square crackdown yesterday amid growing calls in the city for greater autonomy from China.

The vigil, which each year draws tens of thousands, has caused a widening rift in Hong Kong’s pro-democracy camp between those who believe the victims of the crackdown should be remembered and those who see the event’s message as increasing­ly irrelevant.

Semi-autonomous Hong Kong is the only location on Chinese soil to see a major commemorat­ion to mark the military’s brutal crushing of pro-democracy protests in central Beijing in 1989, with residents gathering en masse in Victoria Park every year.

But young activists from the new ‘localist’ movement say Hong Kong should push for its own autonomy, even independen­ce, rather than the democratis­ation of the mainland, which is part of the vigil’s main message.

Localism grew out of the failure of mass pro-democracy rallies in 2014 to gain concession­s from China on political reform for Hong Kong.

A growing number of student groups have now broken away from the event.

“For this generation, we want to put emphasis on fighting for democracy in Hong Kong,” said Althea Suen, president of the

For this generation, we want to put emphasis on fighting for democracy in Hong Kong. — Althea Suen, Hong Kong University Student Union (HKUSU) president

Hong Kong University Student Union (HKUSU).

Suen added that building a democratic China was ‘not our responsibi­lity’.

The Hong Kong Federation of Students, a founding member of the alliance that organises the vigil, will also not participat­e this year.

“The alliance has lost touch with Hong Kongers,” said Jocelyn Wong of HKFS. “The candleligh­t vigil has not made any progress in the past 27 years.”

Others were more acerbic in their criticism.

Shue Yan University student union likened the organisers of the vigil to ‘pimps and bawds who run a brothel after they got raped themselves’ on a Facebook post late last month.

HKU and the Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK) will hold alternativ­e forums at the same time as the vigil Saturday evening.

The leader of the new proindepen­dence Hong Kong National Party will speak at CUHK.

“Although the younger generation also feels sorry for the sacrifices of the students in 1989... they don’t share the same memory of Chinese identity with the older generation,” the party said in a statement yesterday.

Vigil organiser, the Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements of China, said although it had not achieved its ultimate goal of getting Chinese authoritie­s to admit to the crackdown, it had helped keep the memory alive.

Richard Tsoi of the alliance said if the vigil was axed, Tiananmen would be rendered a ‘non-issue’ due to repression from Beijing.

Hundreds — by some estimates more than a thousand — died after the Communist Party sent tanks to crush demonstrat­ions in the square in the heart of Beijing, where student-led protesters had staged a peaceful seven-week sitin to demand democratic reforms.

The protests are branded a ‘counter-revolution­ary rebellion’ by Chinese authoritie­s and many on the mainland remain unaware of the crackdown.

Tsoi hopes for a turnout of more than 100,000 people Saturday, similar to numbers in recent years, although heavy rain may keep some away. — AFP

 ??  ?? An activist sits in front of a poster of the ‘Tank Man’ photo at his stall in Hong Kong, ahead of the commemorat­ion of the bloody Tiananmen Square crackdown in 1989.— AFP photo
An activist sits in front of a poster of the ‘Tank Man’ photo at his stall in Hong Kong, ahead of the commemorat­ion of the bloody Tiananmen Square crackdown in 1989.— AFP photo

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