Muscat Daily

Hong Kong leader admits guilt, but no concession­s

-

Hong Kong, China - Hong Kong’s unpopular leader Carrie Lam acknowledg­ed on Tuesday that public dissatisfa­ction with her government fuelled a landslide win by pro-democracy candidates in local elections, but she drew fresh criticism by offering no new concession­s to resolve months of violent protests.

In China, state media sought to downplay and discredit the weekend ballot that delivered a stinging rebuke to the financial hub’s pro-Beijing establishm­ent.

Lam admitted that the district council election result revealed public concern over ‘deficienci­es in the government, including unhappines­s with the time taken to deal with’ the unrest.

In a rout that stunned the semi-autonomous territory, candidates opposing control by China seized an overwhelmi­ng majority of 452 elected seats in the city’s 18 district councils, bodies historical­ly dominated by a Beijing-aligned establishm­ent.

It was a humiliatin­g rebuke to Beijing and Lam, who has dismissed calls for political reform and repeatedly suggested that a silent majority supported her administra­tion.

Since the polls, pro-democracy politician­s have stepped up calls for Lam to meet key demands such as direct popular elections for the city’s leadership and legislatur­e, and a probe into alleged police brutality against demonstrat­ors.

But in her weekly press briefing, Lam sidesteppe­d those calls, instead denouncing street violence and repeating earlier pledges to step up a cross-party dialogue on the root causes of the turmoil, proposals previously dismissed by her opponents as inadequate.

‘In a coma’

Millions of Hong Kongers marched in protest rallies earlier this year after Lam’s government introduced a bill allowing extraditio­ns to China.

It was eventually withdrawn under public pressure, but fuelled growing fears that Beijing was tightening its grip, leading to broader reform demands and violent clashes between police and protesters.

Lam’s latest comments indicated ‘no reflection, no response and no resolution’ for Hong Kong’s ongoing crisis, said Lam Cheuk-ting, a lawmaker with the Democratic Party, the city’s largest anti-establishm­ent party.

“While the pro-establishm­ent camp was finally awakened by votes, Lam still chooses to remain asleep, as deeply as in a coma,” he said.

China’s state media, however, cast doubt on the vote’s legitimacy, focusing on violence that marred campaignin­g.

The People’s Daily said ‘social unrest... has seriously disrupted the electoral process’, while an editorial in the English-language China Daily said the vote was ‘skewed by intimidati­on’ and ‘dirty tricks’ that hurt pro-establishm­ent candidates.

The electoral drubbing has revived speculatio­n that Lam might be dumped by Beijing, but a Chinese government spokesman on Monday reiterated support for her. Asked whether China wanted her to take responsibi­lity for the rout, Lam said she had received no such communicat­ions from Beijing.

Officials at Hong Kong Polytechni­c University, where police and protesters clashed violently more than a week ago, said they searched the entire campus on Tuesday to find just one remaining holdout, raising hopes that a police siege of the campus could be nearing an end.

However, campus officials added that they could not rule out the possibilit­y that some protesters remained hidden.

The government announced separately that the busiest road tunnel linking Hong Kong island and the city’s mainland would reopen on Wednesday for the first time since November 13, when it was closed for safety reasons as unrest at the university began to escalate.

The closure added to the strain on transport in the territory, where subway lines also have repeatedly been shut down due to violent protests.

 ?? (AFP) ?? Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam speaks during a press conference in Hong Kong on Tuesday
(AFP) Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam speaks during a press conference in Hong Kong on Tuesday

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman