Students
across Hong Kong have boycotted classes, kicking off a week of pro-democracy
rallies. The protesters are demanding the reversal of a new election plan which
will give China more sway in the next election.
Deutsche Welle, 22 Sep 2014
"How
can a few people decide Hong Kong's future? Why not seven million of Hong
Kong's people?" Alex Chow, the general secretary of the Hong Kong
Federation of Students, cried out before several thousands protesters in Hong
Kong on Monday.
Last month,
China's top legislative body, the National People's Congress, announced that a
new "broadly representative committee" would nominate candidates for
Hong Kong's next chief executive in the 2017 election. The move was seen as a
reversal of China's promise that the elections in three years would be the
first since the handover to be decided by universal suffrage.
In response
to the policy change by Beijing, students from a number of universities in Hong
Kong are staging a series of mass protests throughout the week in what has been
billed by pro-democracy activists as a "new era of civil
disobedience."
Continued
protests
The
demonstrations began on Monday on the campus of the Chinese University of Hong
Kong, where an estimated 3,000 students gathered, abandoning their scheduled
classes.
"Pre-selected
candidates by a controlled nominating committee can only represent vested
interests, but not the general public," Chow told the crowd.
"If we
hear nothing from them, the students, the people will definitely upgrade the
movement to another level," the student leader added.
In recent
months, a number of groups have staged protests in the financial hub, including
a Occupy Central. In June, the activist group held an unofficial referendum on
the election reform by Beijing. The vast majority of the 800,000 people who
cast ballots said they wanted the public to nominate candidates for Hong Kong's
chief executive, not a committee loyal to Beijing.
Monday's
demonstrations reportedly coincided with a visit by roughly 60 Hong Kong
tycoons to Beijing, where they were meeting with Chinese Xi Jingping, according
to the Associated Press.
kms/tj (AP, AFP, Reuters, dpa)

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