The Manila Times

Hong Kong: 800,000-strong peaceful march is win-win for protesters and police

- FRANK CHING Frank.ching@gmail.com Twitter: @FrankChing­1

EVIDENTLY stung by the passage of the Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act by the United States, the Hong Kong government has made a multi-barreled response — it denied that human rights have been eroded; granted permission for a mass rally on Sunday, marked internatio­nally as Human Rights

- ures who “urged foreign government­s or legislatur­es to interfere with the affairs” of Hong Kong.

In a statement marking Human Rights Day, the government declared the “great importance” it attaches to “its constituti­onal duty to safeguard and protect human rights and freedoms.” It also called for an end to violence, saying the government hoped “all sectors of the community could work together to restore order in society as soon as possible.”

The Sunday rally was organized by Civil Human Rights Front, the same organizati­on that had organized two massive marches in June, when a million or more

time police had given the group permission to hold a protest since August 18.

Much was riding on the outcome of this demonstrat­ion, the

- ties were badly trounced in district council elections last month. There was much trepidatio­n that the peaceful march would end in violence, as so many demonstrat­ions had in recent months. The front assigned 200 marshals to ensure that protesters adhered to the route agreed with the police and to maintain order.

In the end, it was a victory for both sides, the protesters and the police. Organizers said 800,000 people had taken part and a government statement issued Sunday night agreed.

“It was in general peaceful and orderly,” the government said, adding, “Today’s procession as well as the 50,000 public assemblies and procession­s held

years are testimony to the freedom of peaceful assembly, of procession, of demonstrat­ion and of speech enjoyed by the people.”

At 8: 15 p. m., when all demonstrat­ors had completed the march, the organizers ended the rally early and asked marchers to go home. Some who were prepared for combat were also persuaded to leave.

On Friday (December 6), the government issued a highly unusual statement denouncing leg

who had “urged foreign government­s or legislatur­es to interfere with the affairs” of Hong Kong.

“Some politician­s in Hong Kong openly supported the United States’ ‘ Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act,’ and suggested similar legislatio­n in other countries or regions with the intent to demand foreign interventi­on in Hong Kong affairs,” the statement asserted. “This only conveys the wrong message to violent protesters and misleads them into thinking they have gained the support from other countries or regions. These politician­s must bear the responsibi­lity for society descending into chaos.”

but several pro-democracy activ

met with politician­s there.

One of them, legislator Jeremy Tam, who grew up in Australia, said it was up to that country whether to create legislatio­n to support the pro- democracy movement in Hong Kong and that all the visitors could do was to “present a case.”

Chief Executive Carrie Lam continues her hardline stance of no concession­s but even her supporters appear to be deserting her.

Felix Chung, leader of the proestabli­shment Liberal Party, has thrown his party’s weight behind some of the protesters’ demands.

On RTHK, the public broadcaste­r, he called for three actions,

of an independen­t inquiry which I see as the bare minimum,” he said. “The second being the restructur­ing of the government in order to direct accountabi­lity for those responsibl­e for the crisis. The third action is to think about starting the conversati­on of political reform.”

Starry Lee, chairman of the main pro- establishm­ent party, the Democratic Alliance for the Betterment and Progress of Hong Kong, castigated senior members of the Carrie Lam administra­tion during a motion debate on whether to start impeachmen­t proceeding­s against the chief executive. However, her party voted against the motion.

Jimmy Sham, convenor of the front, in calling on marchers to disperse, also called on the chief executive to respond to their demands, in particular the one to set up an independen­t Commission of Inquiry into the role of the police in the protests over the last six months. Despite a peaceful march by 800,000 people, she has again refused to respond.

This calls to mind a remark made by Jasper Tsang, former president of the legislatur­e and a staunch member of the pro-establishm­ent camp. In a recently published interview, he said that the Carrie Lam government “is unwilling to do anything until it is too late.”

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