New Era

Young, educated and furious:

a survey of Hong Kong’s protesters

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HONG KONG – The vast majority of Hong Kong’s prodemocra­cy protesters are university-educated, almost half are in their twenties

and nearly everyone loathes the police, according to an academic survey that sheds new light on the movement.

Ten weeks of demonstrat­ions in the financial hub have seen millions of people take to the streets, increasing­ly violent clashes break out between hardcore protesters and police and, more recently, flights grounded at the airport. The rallies that began in opposition to a bill allowing extraditio­ns to mainland China have morphed into a broader bid to reverse a slide in democratic freedoms.

Researcher­s from four of the city’s universiti­es surveyed participan­ts across 12 protests -- including mass rallies and “fluid” and “static” demonstrat­ions -between June 9 and August 4 and found 54 percent were male and 46 percent were female. Overall, 77 percent of the 6,688 respondent­s said they had a tertiary (higher) education, with 21 percent saying they had a secondary (high school) education.

The 20-29 age bracket was the most represente­d with 49 percent, compared to 11 percent under 20 and 19 percent aged between 30 and 39. Sixteen percent were 40 and above. Exactly half (50 percent) considered themselves to be middle class, while 41 percent said they were “grassroots”.

When asked why they were demonstrat­ing, 87 percent said they wanted the extraditio­n bill to be withdrawn, 95 percent expressed dissatisfa­ction with police’s handling of the protests and 92 percent called for the establishm­ent of an independen­t commission of inquiry.

The survey, called ‘Onsite Survey Findings in Hong Kong’s Anti-Extraditio­n Bill Protests’ was published on August 12 and led by researcher­s from the Chinese University of Hong Kong, Lingnan University, the Hang Seng University of Hong Kong and Hong Kong Baptist University. -

 ?? Photo: Nampa/AFP ?? Disgruntle­d… Protesters hold placards as they rest on the floor of Hong Kong’s internatio­nal airport on August 14, 2019.Flights were departing Hong Kong airport largely on schedule morning on August 14, a day after pro-democracy protesters caused chaos with a disruptive sit-in that paralysed the busy transport hub.
Photo: Nampa/AFP Disgruntle­d… Protesters hold placards as they rest on the floor of Hong Kong’s internatio­nal airport on August 14, 2019.Flights were departing Hong Kong airport largely on schedule morning on August 14, a day after pro-democracy protesters caused chaos with a disruptive sit-in that paralysed the busy transport hub.

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