Jump to content

Thousands march for democracy in Hong Kong


Lite Beer

Recommended Posts

Thousands march for democracy in Hong Kong

HONG KONG (AFP) - Thousands of pro-democracy protesters took to the streets of Hong Kong Sunday for the first time since mass demonstrations shut down parts of the city for more than two months.

A sea of yellow umbrellas -- the symbol of the campaign -- moved slowly through central Hong Kong with crowds shouting for "true universal suffrage".

Organisers had said the rally would draw 50,000 people. An AFP reporter estimated that several thousand had joined the march by mid-afternoon but no police estimate was available.

Police warned that attempts to reoccupy main roads cleared of tented protest camps in December are likely.

But no protest group has announced it intends to relaunch the occupation, and the march began peacefully Sunday afternoon with many carrying yellow balloons.

The rally will gauge the public’s willingness to keep fighting for free leadership elections. Authorities have made no concessions to activists’ demands and tensions remain high in the semi-autonomous Chinese territory.

"We just want to express our frustration with the government in Hong Kong," said protester Ronnie Chan, who is in his 40s and works in sales and marketing.

"We understand there is very little we can do, but if we don’t speak out nothing will change."

Officials in December cleared protest camps which had blocked several main roads. Rallies drew around 100,000 at their peak and saw intermittent violent clashes with police.

China promised Hong Kongers the right for the first time to vote for their next chief executive in 2017. But it ruled that nominees must be vetted by a pro-Beijing committee, a proposal which has been heavily criticised by activists.

Organiser Daisy Chan said the rally would show that the Occupy movement, as the protests were known, was a political awakening.

"In the past, these citizens were less political than they are right now. The Occupy movement woke people up."

The founders of the movement including Benny Tai, along with teenage activist Joshua Wong and other student leaders, are also attending the rally.

Student activist Alex Chow said there was no plan to take back the streets.

"We don’t have a plan (to reoccupy). If others want to do it, they will have to do it themselves," he told AFP.

Source: http://www.nationmultimedia.com/breakingnews/Thousands-march-for-democracy-in-Hong-Kong-30253132.html

nationlogo.jpg
-- The Nation 2015-02-01

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites


CCP authorities in Hong Kong are unable to keep democracy demonstrators off the streets and cannot prevent democracy media from reporting events and developments.

Four student leaders were called in separately by the police, shown videos of themselves during the 79-day Occupy late last year, threatened, but refused to answer questions, eventually released under threats.

A democracy newspaper editor was seriously slashed by knife attackers and the home of a publisher who forecast the fall of the Chinese Communist Party during 2016 has been firebombed.

In Taiwan the independence party that rejects the "one country, two systems" falsehood swept local elections across the island and is now poised to win the national election coming next year.

In Taiwan it's the Sunflower Revolution and in Hong Kong its the Umbrella Movement. Beijing has serious problems with prosperous Chinese democrats living off its mainland.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

The U.S. media will hardly make a peep.

They have their own agenda.

Interpretation: the US controls everything, and without the US, the world would be a perfect place.

LarryBird, agree with you

Edited by Nemesis7
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Richard C Bush III who is director of the China center of the Brookings Institution in Washington and is former director of intelligence for East Asia at the National Intelligence Council, notes the significance of the Umbrella Movement in Hong Kong.

Hong Kong is important to the United States and U.S.-China relations primarily because it is a test of the proposition that ethnic Chinese people are perfectly capable of democratic citizenship. Hong Kong can and should be an example of Chinese government that is representative, accountable, and effective – the sort of government that Americans would like to see emerge in China someday.

Let me stress four words in that last sentence.

  • Example: Chinese leaders and their citizens will be more likely to choose democracy, whatever its flaws, when they see that it works well in Chinese societies like Hong Kong and Taiwan.
  • Representative: for Hong Kong’s system to be representative, the candidates for major elections must offer voters a choice between all major points of view.
  • Accountable: elections give citizens the opportunity to confer legitimacy on leaders when they do well and hold them accountable when they do not.
  • Effective: The majority of Hong Kong people no doubt want a democratic system for its own sake, but they also expect that it will address the problems in their everyday lives.

http://www.brookings.edu/research/testimony/2014/11/19-hong-kong-democracy-bush

http://www.brookings.edu/research/testimony/2014/12/03-hong-kong-umbrella-movement-bush

The outcome of the democracy struggle in Hong Kong, which is not yet determined, will tell the world what kind of power the CCP Boyz in Beijing intend to be and would be if they survive and if they prevail regionally and globally.

For instance, as confirmed by the emergence last year of the Sunflower Revolution, the vast majority of Taiwan citizens have long since rejected one-country, two systems. China’s Hong Kong policies only reconfirm what Taiwan people already knew. The independence party last November swept the local elections nationwide and are expected to score a similar win the general election next year, creating new headaches for the CCP Boyz in Beijing.

Hong Kong events also send a signal to all of East Asia’s democracies, not just to Taiwan. Hong Kong is and has been as ready for democracy. The Instability of the past ten years in Hong Kong is due more to the absence of democracy than because it is unready for democracy.

The strategic question for East Asia is what the rise of the PRChina means for its neighbors. That question will be answered in part by Beijing's power relative to the United States and others. But it will also be answered by what happens between the CCP Boyz and their neighbors in a series of specific conflicts, from HKG to the South China Sea to the East Sea and Japan. Through those interactions, the CCP Boyz are defining what kind of great power they are delusional about becoming.

If the struggle HKG for a more democratic system ends well, it will tell us the CCP Boyz highly value their relationship with the United States and they are prepared to become responsible members of the global system. If the Umbrella Movement ends badly, it will condemn the CCP Boyz in Beijing to the category of Stalin and Mao.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.








  • Topics

  • Latest posts...

    1. 33

      Hillary Clinton Warns of Upcoming Misinformation Targeting Kamala Harris

    2. 75

      V P Debate

    3. 0

      Brexit Tensions Resurface Amid Starmer's Push for Youth Mobility Scheme

    4. 0

      Trump Challenges Special Counsel's Evidence Release in Election Case

    5. 0

      Shanghai Mall Stabbing Leaves a Community in Shock & Fear

    6. 0

      The Rebirth of Canada's Right: How Pierre Poilievre is Shaking Up Canadian Politics

    7. 0

      Sydney Protest Sparks Arrest Over Alleged Display of Hezbollah Flag

    8. 0

      P Diddy Denies Sexual Misconduct Allegations 120 New Accusers Emerge

    9. 0

      China's Economic Struggles Deepen

    10. 0

      Prof Brian Cox Declines Mars Journey, Prefers Moon Exploration

    11. 252

      Israel Hamas War the Widening Middle East Conflict

    12. 32

      Boris Johnson Questions the Effectiveness of 'Medieval' Lockdowns in Covid Fight

    13. 26

      The Decline of the United Nations: A Toothless Global Forum

×
×
  • Create New...