Protesters in bid to work out strategy
HONG KONG: Tens of thousands joined a pro-democracy march on Wednesday on the anniversary of Hong Kong’s handover to China, in what organisers described as an opportunity to work out the movement’s next step as momentum wanes.
Crowds gathered in Victoria Park in the afternoon before marching to the government’s offices in central Hong Kong.
“The most important thing is to express disapproval to the Hong Kong and Chinese communist government for suppressing the freedoms of Chinese people and real elections for Hong Kong people,” protester Wong Man-ying, 61, told AFP “Things are quickly transforming to fit a Chinese model,” added office clerk Anna Cheung. “We need Beijing to hear our voices.”
Organisers said the turnout was 48,000, lower than in previous years after almost 12 months of rallies in the politically divided city, with campaigners admitting fatigue had set in. The government’s plan to allow the public to vote for the city’s chief executive for the first time in 2017 was derided as “fake democracy” by the opposition as it stuck to Beijing’s ruling that candidates must be vetted by a loyalist committee.
That ruling sparked mass street rallies and the bill was finally voted down by pro-democracy lawmakers last month.
“Momentum has slowed down after the veto over political reform,” said Johnson Yeung of the Civil Human Rights Front, the march organisers, but he insisted turnout numbers this year were not important. Instead the march was a chance to reshape the message of the democracy movement, he said, which has splintered since the end of the mass street rallies in December.
“Right now people are asking ‘what next?’ after the veto. We hope the march can set the political agenda and give citizens a chance to discuss how to bring the democratic movement forward.”
This year is the 18th anniversary of the handover of Hong Kong to China by Britain in 1997 and the march is traditionally an outpouring of protest directed at both China’s communist government and the local leadership. It comes at a time when Hong Kong is deeply polarised and there is fragmentation in both pro-democracy and pro-Beijing camps.
Pro-Beijing groups separately held anniversary events, including lion dance performances and a street parade, while the public poured into an open day at China’s People’s Liberation Army (PLA) barracks in Hong Kong. In a speech at a ceremony for the handover anniversary, city leader Leung Chun-ying criticised lawmakers who had rejected the reform package.
A small group of protesters near the ceremony carried a cardboard coffin marked “Grave of Hong Kong - Date of Death: 1997” and burned a portrait of Leung.sse