The Borneo Post

Tens of thousands at HK Tiananmen vigil despite boycott

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HONG KONG: Tens of thousands gathered Saturday for Hong Kong’s commemorat­ion of the bloody Tiananmen Square crackdown despite many young activists turning their backs on the candlelit vigil as calls grow for greater autonomy from China.

The vigil, which each year draws huge crowds to the city’s Victoria Park, 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.

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 the 2014 student-led prodemocra­cy rallies to gain concession­s from China on political reform for Hong Kong, and a growing number of student groups are now boycotting the vigil to hold alternativ­e gatherings.

A small group of proindepen­dence activists ran onto the main stage in Victoria Park before the vigil began, demanding Hong Kong break away.

But the park still became a sea of candles as residents paid tribute to the Tiananmen victims — organisers estimated 125,000 had attended, down from last year’s 135,000.

They sang protest songs and chanted ‘ Fight to the end’ as footage of the bloody crackdown was shown on big screens.

One young student who took the stage said those boycotting the event did not represent the entire younger generation, to loud applause.

“This is a question of righteousn­ess, so we persevere in coming here,” a tearful Tong Hiu-yan, 21, told the crowds.

However, students at a forum at Hong Kong University said they felt little connection with the traditiona­l commemorat­ion.

“We’re the new generation — it is more meaningful for us to do this. We have to stand against the Chinese regime, but we also have to think about Hong Kong’s future,” said student Raven Kwok, 20, among hundreds who had gathered for the forum.

The president of HKU’s student union, Althea Suen, said the fight was now about democracy for Hong Kong.

Building a democratic China was ‘ not our responsibi­lity’, she said.

The Hong Kong Federation of Students — a founding member of the alliance that organises the vigil — also stayed away this year, saying the event had ‘lost touch’.

Some in the park said the event could be improved by seeking more discussion with newly emerged groups, but that without it the memory of Tiananmen could die.

“I feel really sad about this, even though I wasn’t born (then),” Cecilia Ng, 19, told AFP.

“Many of my classmates don’t know or understand what happened.”

Despite lower numbers than last year, organiser Albert Ho said there was no such regular protest gathering ‘in the history of mankind’.

After the vigil, scuffles broke out as around 300 protesters marched to China’s Hong Kong liaison office.

The confrontat­ion happened when police tried to prevent the group walking in the road, but the march resumed peacefully.

They threw a placard demanding China free all prisoners of conscience over the wall of the liaison office compound and burned paper effigies of former mainland officials blamed for the Tiananmen crackdown.

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 sevenweek sit-in 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. — AFP

 ??  ?? A protester (centre) shouts into a microphone as an effigy of former Chinese leaders Deng Xiaoping (top left), Li Peng (top centre) and Yang Shangkun (top right) are raised during a march to the Chinese liaison office in Hong Kong after an annual vigil...
A protester (centre) shouts into a microphone as an effigy of former Chinese leaders Deng Xiaoping (top left), Li Peng (top centre) and Yang Shangkun (top right) are raised during a march to the Chinese liaison office in Hong Kong after an annual vigil...

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