Yahoo – AFP,
Elaine YU, Laura MANNERING, July 15, 2017
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| Thousands took to the streets of central Hong Kong Saturday night holding candles as they marched in memory of pro-democracy Chinese dissident Liu Xiaobo |
Thousands
took to the streets of central Hong Kong Saturday night holding candles as they
marched in memory of pro-democracy Chinese dissident Liu Xiaobo.
Veteran
activists led the solemn gathering which wove its way from the commercial heart
of Hong Kong Island to China's liaison office, with some marchers in tears.
Liu's ashes
were buried at sea Saturday, depriving supporters of a place to pay tribute
following his death Thursday from cancer while in custody on the mainland.
Hong
Kongers have already held memorial events but Saturday's was by far the
largest.
It came the
day after four pro-democracy legislators were disqualified from Hong Kong's
parliament, worsening fears that freedoms in the semi-autonomous city are under
serious threat from an ever more assertive Beijing.
"Loving
a country is wanting it to make progress," said marcher Emily Chau, 24.
"But
this is how he was treated for being so loyal to the country."
Chau said
she feared Hong Kong's freedoms were also now in jeopardy.
"With
the disqualification of the lawmakers yesterday, it's like this place is
decaying," she told AFP.
The city is
ruled under a "one country, two systems" deal granting it freedoms unseen
on the mainland, guaranteed in the handover agreement when colonial power
Britain returned Hong Kong to China in 1997.
But Beijing
stands accused of increased interference in a range of areas, from politics to
media and education
![]() |
People
attend a candlelight march for the late Chinese Nobel laureate Liu Xiaobo
in
Hong Kong on July 15, 2017
|
'Great
scholar'
Marchers of
all ages carried floral wreaths and white chrysanthemums, bowing three times in
front of a makeshift memorial to Liu outside the liaison office, a traditional
sign of respect at funerals.
Some
brought their children and grandchildren with them.
Among the
crowds was Lam Wing-kee, one of the five Hong Kong booksellers known for
publishing salacious titles about Beijing politicians who vanished and
resurfaced in the mainland in 2015.
Lam was
allowed back to Hong Kong last year on condition that he pick up a hard disc
listing bookstore customers and return.
Instead he
skipped bail and went public to tell an explosive story of how he was
blindfolded by mainland police after crossing the border, and interrogated for
months.
He has
since attended a number of rallies in the city.
![]() |
A man signs
a condolence book at a makeshift memorial for the late Chinese
Nobel laureate
Liu Xiaobo, outside the Chinese Liaison Office in Hong Kong
on July 15, 2017
|
Lam said he
had been saddened by the news of Liu's death but would not lose hope for the
future of Hong Kong.
"If
the time-frame you look at is too short, it will be pessimistic," he told
AFP.
"It's
not enough just to see what's in front of you."
Steven
Wong, 45, had travelled from Singapore to attend the march, saying he had
respected Liu for many years.
Wong was
born and grew up in Beijing and was a high school student there in 1989, the
year of the brutal crackdown on pro-democracy protesters in the city's
Tiananmen Square.
He said he
remembered burned-out tanks and blood smeared on lamp posts the day after.
Shortly afterwards his family moved to Singapore.
"He
was a great scholar who woke up young people, especially of my
generation,"Wong said of Liu.
"He
made me think deeply about what we can do as a Chinese (person) and what we can
teach our students," said Wong.



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