Daily Dispatch

Lam battles on against HK storm

Hong Kong leader forced to jettison policy speech amid hubbub

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Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam had to abandon her policy speech in the legislatur­e on Wednesday because of jeering lawmakers but later offered no olive branch to protesters, hoping instead to ease resentment by building public housing.

Lam, who had to broadcast the annual address via a video link after the rowdy scenes in the city’s assembly, hoped to restore confidence in her administra­tion and address discontent after four months of often violent anti-government protests.

She had to halt her initial attempts to deliver the address after pro-democracy lawmakers called out for “five demands, not one less” and projected the protest rallying cry onto a backdrop behind her.

The protesters’ demands include universal suffrage and an independen­t inquiry into what they say has been excessive force by police in dealing with demonstrat­ions.

In her policy statement, Lam was unapologet­ic about her government’s response to the protests, which has seen her introduce colonial-era emergency laws and riot police fire thousands of rounds of tear gas and hundreds of rubber bullets at activists throwing bricks and petrol bombs.

“Any acts that advocate Hong Kong’s independen­ce and threaten the country’s sovereignt­y, security and developmen­t interests will not be tolerated,” she said.

“Despite the stormy times and overwhelmi­ng difficulti­es Hong Kong is experienci­ng, I believe that so long as we accurately adhere to the principle of ‘one country, two systems’, we will be able to get out of the impasse.”

The protesters are angry at what they see as Beijing’s tightening grip on the city which was guaranteed 50 years of freedoms under the “one country, two systems” formula under which it returned to China from Britain in 1997.

Beijing rejects the charge and accuses Western countries, especially the US and Britain, of stirring up trouble. The unrest poses the biggest popular challenge to Chinese President Xi Jinping since he came to power in 2012. He warned that any attempt to divide China would be crushed.

Lam later told a news conference that she had held “closed door” meetings with some members of the protest movement and when the unrest ended she would hold more to address the political situation.

But pro-democracy lawmaker Tanya Chan said Lam should resign for failing to address the protesters’ five core demands.

“Both her hands are soaked with blood. We hope Carrie Lam withdraws and quits,” an emotional Chan said.

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