Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Hong Kong ralliers vow to persist

Demonstrat­ors gather in show of unity for democracy effort

- EILEEN NG

HONG KONG — Hundreds of silver-haired activists joined young Hong Kong protesters for a unity rally Saturday, vowing that their monthslong movement will not fade away until there is greater democracy in the Chinese territory.

The rally at a downtown park was among several peaceful gatherings by protesters last week. They are trying to keep up the pressure on the government amid a lull in violence after seeing a local election victory by the pro-democracy bloc and after gaining U.S. support for their cause.

A local boys band belted out songs to tell protesters that “the whole Hong Kong is supporting you.” Speakers reminded the crowd that it wasn’t time to celebrate and that the fight for real autonomy must persist.

The protesters are angry over creeping Chinese interferen­ce in Hong Kong that they say is eroding the rights promised when the former British colony returned to Chinese rule in 1997.

“The government wants us to desert the front-liners and young protesters, but we will stick with them,” rally organizer Tam Kwok-sun, 64, said to loud cheers from the crowd. “Sometimes their actions are violent and aggressive, but we are more unhappy with the government’s behavior.”

Since the unrest broke out in June, protesters have disrupted traffic, smashed public facilities and pro-China shops, and hurled gasoline bombs in battles with riot police who have responded with volleys of tear gas and water cannons.

The protesters’ occupation of several universiti­es last month after fiery clashes with police capped one of the most violent chapters in the turmoil, which has contribute­d to the city’s first recession in a decade.

Hong Kong’s leader, Carrie Lam, has appealed for the current calm to continue but has refused to bow to protesters’ demands, which include free elections for her post and the Legislatur­e as well as an independen­t inquiry into allegation­s of police brutality.

“It’s still a very early stage of the revolution,” a masked activist, who gave her name as Mai, 26, said Saturday. “People are tired physically and mentally, so we are waiting for the right moment for a fightback.”

Hong Kong police have arrested 5,890 people as a result of the protests.

“The government is still stubborn. Every one of us, young and old, must contribute in our own way. The movement will not stop,” a woman, 63, who identified herself as Mrs. Tam, said as she distribute­d Japanese honey candies to slogan-chanting young activists at the park.

Some protesters returned to the streets Saturday night, using metal fences, cartons and bricks to block traffic in the Mong Kok area in Kowloon. Dozens had gathered there to mark three months since police stormed a subway car in the area and hit passengers with batons and pepper spray. Most of Saturday’s protesters left after police reportedly fired pepper balls and issued warnings.

The U.N. high commission­er for human rights, Michelle Bachelet, said Lam’s government must prioritize “meaningful, inclusive” dialogue to resolve the crisis.

In an opinion piece Saturday in the South China Morning Post, she also urged Lam to hold an “independen­t and impartial judge-led investigat­ion” into alleged use of excessive force by police, in order to restore trust and repair rifts.

The U.S. last week passed two laws to support the protest movement. One prescribes sanctions on officials found guilty of human-rights abuses and requires an annual review of the city’s special trade status. The other bans the export of nonlethal munitions to Hong Kong police.

China has warned of strong countermea­sures, and Hong Kong’s government has slammed the U.S. move as unwarrante­d meddling in its affairs.

Elsewhere, Chinese state media reported Saturday that Lee Henley, also identified as Hu Xiang and a citizen of an unidentifi­ed foreign country, was arrested over allegation­s of funding activities that threaten China’s national security, including “conspiring with foreign forces to support Hong Kong riots.”

The reports also said a Taiwanese man, Lee Meng Chu, was held for “allegedly spying and leaking China’s national secrets” and backing the Hong Kong protests. Beijing had confirmed earlier that Lee was held after he disappeare­d during a trip to mainland China in August, but it didn’t give details.

In August, a British Consulate employee in Hong Kong was arrested during a trip to the mainland and was freed 15 days later after confessing to soliciting prostituti­on. But Simon Cheng said it was a forced confession and that he was tortured by Chinese police and pressed for informatio­n about Hong Kong’s activists.

More rallies are being planned in Hong Kong for today, including an anti-tear gas protest and a gratitude march to the U.S. Consulate.

 ?? AP/NG HAN GUAN ?? A riot officer gestures at journalist­s Saturday on a street in Hong Kong.
AP/NG HAN GUAN A riot officer gestures at journalist­s Saturday on a street in Hong Kong.

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