The Manila Times

Hong Kongers await Beijing olive branch after rare calm

- TIQUIA

HONG KONG: Hong Kongers have delivered a clarion call for change over the last fortnight with a landslide local election defeat for the government and more than 1 in 10 hitting the streets peacefully on Sunday — but will Beijing listen?

Monday marks the sixth month anniversar­y of a movement that has upended the semi- autonomous Chinese hub’s reputation for stability and blanketed its streets with unpreceden­ted scenes of political violence.

But the last two weeks has seen a dramatic drop- off in clashes and vandalism — something the city’s pro-Beijing leadership has insisted must be a precursor to any meaningful dialogue.

The question on many lips now is whether chief executive Carrie Lam — and Beijing — will take the opportunit­y to reach out before anger explodes once more.

“Ignoring our voices will only make the snowball get bigger and bigger and there will be consequenc­es to that,”

within the pro-democracy movement’s more moderate wing, told Agence France-Presse (AFP).

The rare period of calm began in the run up to citywide local polls in late November — the only election with universal suffrage.

Millions turned out tipping pro-establishm­ent parties out of

the city’s 18 local councils to the pro-democracy camp.

The vote shattered government claims that a “silent majority” opposed the protests.

Then on Sunday the city witnessed its largest mass rally in months with organisers estimating some 800,000 people turned out, a vivid illustrati­on of the public frustratio­n that still seethes under the surface.

The rally, which received rare permission, was almost entirely peaceful.

courts and police pepper sprayed bystanders during an argument.

time a mass rally has been smoke free since the middle of August.

Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam takes part in her weekly press conference in Hong Kong. Some protestors have lost their jobs, suffered life- changing injuries and even been forced into exile. But six months into Hong Kong’s demonstrat­ions, pro- democracy protesters say they aren’t backing down. commitment­s to listen to people’s demands, labor action. but no concrete concession­s. Mung Siu- tat, head of Hong

Beijing has stuck by her even as she Kong’s pro-democracy Federation languishes with record low approval of Trade Unions, said more than 30 ratings and the city police force’s reputation newly founded unions have reached takes a hammering. out for help in recent weeks.

The movement’s more radical “Quite a number of them are wing — which has embraced violent formed by white-collar workers, tactics — appears to have faded into profession­als and executives, the background for now.

Hardcore protesters had vowed to restart widespread travel disruption­s at dawn on Monday if there was no response from Lam.

But the threats did not emerge.

‘ Very large number’

Jimmy Sham, from rally organizer the Civil Human Rights Front,

the government’s court.

“We have to remind the SAR (Special Administra­tive Region) government that 800,000 people is still a very, very large number,” he told reporters.

“Carrie Lam should listen to our Hong Kongers’ demand as soon as possible,” he added.

Semi-autonomous Hong Kong has been battered by increasing­ly violent demonstrat­ions in the starkest challenge the city has presented to Beijing since its 1997 handover from Britain.

Millions have marched in protests fuelled by years of growing fears that authoritar­ian China is stamping out the city’s liberties.

The movement’s demands include an independen­t inquiry into the police’s handling of the protests, an amnesty for those arrested, and fully free elections.

But there is little sign Lam is willing to budge.

Since the electoral drubbing, her administra­tion has made vague

‘ We still have plans’

On LIHKG, a Reddit-like web forum that serves as a virtual command center for frontliner­s, discussion abounded on whether a resumption of tactics that disrupted ordinary Hong Kongers for much of October

“Many people think the dawn action has devolved into just disturbing residents while having no effect pressuring the government,” one popular post read, referring to the tactic of paralyzing the transport network.

Some are looking to more traditiona­l necessary to unionize but have been politicall­y awakened by the movement,” Mung told AFP.

Arrests skyrockete­d in October and early November, especially after thousands of more hardline activists were surrounded by police on a university campus.

“The scale [of violence] may go down a bit because of the massive arrests over the last few weeks,” political analyst Dixon Wong told AFP.

But there are growing fears unrest may return if Lam and Beijing do not offer some sort of olive branch.

On Sunday evening, organisers called on marchers to go home, one black-clad protester took off his mask.

“You have been leading marches for 30 years but what have you achieved?” he shouted.

“We still have plans for a lot of things we want to do for Hong Kong.”

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