Jakarta Globe – AFP, Aug 31, 2014
Hong Kong. Macau re-elected its incumbent leader in an unchallenged contest on Sunday as the gambling hub faces growing calls for democracy amid anger over deteriorating living conditions and government accountability.
Hong Kong. Macau re-elected its incumbent leader in an unchallenged contest on Sunday as the gambling hub faces growing calls for democracy amid anger over deteriorating living conditions and government accountability.
The booming
city’s sole chief executive candidate Fernando Chui was voted in for a second
term by 95 percent of a 400-strong pro-Beijing electoral committee, in a
foregone contest which democracy advocates have called “ridiculous”.
“Chui was
elected by 380 votes,” a Macau government spokesman told AFP. There were 13
blank and three invalid ballots among the 396 committee members who voted.
More than a
dozen people marched and bowed in protest outside the venue where the vote was
taking place.
“Every time
we bow down we would like it to be a reminder that Macau people have no choice
[in this election],” protester Sulu Sou told reporters.
The former
Portuguese colony has grown wealthy off the proceeds of its gambling industry,
which rakes in enormous sums of cash, predominantly from wealthy Chinese
mainlanders.
Compared to
its more vocal neighbor Hong Kong, Macau has traditionally been politically
apathetic as long as business continues to boom.
But there
have been signs of political discontent as concerns grow over the city’s future
and how it will be decided.
In the past
week more than 8,500 people have cast votes in an unofficial referendum calling
for greater rights which activists says is part of their nascent attempt to
establish a democratic system.
“When there
are only 400 people that are voting and when these 400 people have no choice,
this is ridiculous,” Sou, a member of the pro-democracy group Macau Conscience,
told AFP.
“Macau
residents are starting to open up to the idea of democracy,” he said, adding
that more people have been taking to the streets in the past few years.
On
Saturday, employees of gambling tycoon Stanley Ho’s SJM took part in industrial
action calling for better wages and working conditions, causing some
disruptions at gaming tables, organizers told AFP.
In May
around 20,000 people marched against a bill allowing government ministers
generous retirement packages in a display of popular protest virtually unseen
before in Macau.
“Wage
increases have plateaued, while living costs and property costs have continued
to go up,” Sou said.
Macau
residents ‘complacent’
Macau
returned to Chinese rule in 1999 and has a separate legal system from the
mainland.
“Macau’s
political system is paternalistic and democratization lacks legal basis,”
analyst Sonny Lo, who specializes in Macau politics, told AFP.
“Most of
the Macau people are pretty complacent and satisfied with the current economic
situation,” Lo said, describing the city’s middle class.
But Lo said
the territory’s younger democracy campaigners were much more likely to clash
with authorities than their parents, who were largely satisfied with the status
quo.
Macau’s
gaming sector has seen a boom in recent years due to an influx of well-heeled
Chinese gamblers, and overtook Las Vegas as the world’s gaming capital in terms
of revenue after the sector was opened up to foreign competition in 2002.
When he
came into power in 2009, Chui said he would diversify the economy and rid the
territory of its reputation for corruption.
“I don’t
think Chui will take any bold steps in order to revamp the political system,”
Lo said. “The Macau democrats will be bound to be dissatisfied.”
Sou said he
had little hope of swift change.
“I hope
that within the next five years, more people will wake up and more people will
try to push for democracy, but I don’t have high hopes for Chui,” Sou said.
Hong Kong
also held an informal poll on democratic reform in June which saw almost
800,000 people vote over 10 days on how the city’s next leader should be chosen
in 2017.
A
pro-democracy group, Occupy Central, has pledged to mobilize thousands of
protesters to block the financial district if authorities refuse to allow the
public to choose candidates.
The top
committee of China’s rubber-stamp legislature is expected to announce its
decision Sunday afternoon on what form the political changes in the city will
take.
Agence France-Presse

No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.