Manila Bulletin

Record low number of Hong Kongers call themselves ‘Chinese’

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HONG KONG (AFP) — The number of Hong Kong people identifyin­g themselves as “Chinese” has reached a record low, after more than a month of mass pro-democracy demonstrat­ions calling for free elections, a poll has found.

Only 8.9 percent of Hong Kongers called themselves “Chinese” in the survey by the Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK), the lowest number since the poll began in 1996.

The weeks-long mass democracy protests which have brought parts of the city to a standstill had influenced the vote, said the head of CUHK’s journalism school, which carries out the regular “Identity and National Identifica­tion of Hong Kong People” survey and published its latest findings Monday.

“Recently people have been exposed to a lot of news about political reforms, voting, elections, and people actually are feeling that part of their identity is being affected by the Chinese authoritie­s,” Anthony Fung told AFP.

Protesters are demanding fully free leadership elections for the semi-autonomous city in 2017.

But Beijing has refused to back down on its insistence that candidates must be vetted by a loyalist committee, a decision critics say is designed to ensure the election of a pro-Beijing stooge.

“For the past five years, people have started to realize that they have to come up with their own future... it seems that some of them may be disappoint­ed that that procedure is not totally in the hands of the Hong Kong people,” he added.

The number of people identifyin­g themselves as Chinese in the vote has dropped consistent­ly since a high of 32.1 percent in 1997, when the city was handed back to China by Britain.

In the most recent poll, more than a quarter of the 810 interviewe­d said they were “Hong Kongers.”

Another 42 percent said they were primarily “Hong Kongers” but were also Chinese.

In 2010, over 16 percent of participan­ts of the same poll identified themselves as “Chinese,” while 12.6 percent did so in 2012.

The city maintains a semi-autonomous status with its own legal and financial system and civil liberties not seen on the mainland, including the right to protest under the “one country, two systems” model.

But democracy activists say Hong Kong’s freedoms have been steadily eroded under Chinese rule.

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