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Scuffle as Hong Kong students escalate pro-democracy strike

Published: 24 Sep 2014 - 12:40 am | Last Updated: 20 Jan 2022 - 08:11 pm

HONG KONG:  Hong Kong students mobbed the city’s leader yesterday in angry scenes as they took their anti-Beijing strike to government headquarters, where more than 1,000 protested against China’s refusal to grant full democracy.
Organisers said 13,000 university students massed at a campus in the north of the semi-autonomous city on Monday to launch a week-long boycott of classes, a strong showing that breathed new life into the democracy campaign which had been stunned by Beijing’s hard-line stance.
Activists say the student protest marks the start of a campaign of civil disobedience against China’s plan to vet nominees for the leadership of the former British colony, dashing hopes for full universal suffrage at 2017 polls.
About a dozen students rushed towards Hong Kong’s leader, chief executive Leung Chun-ying, yesterday when he emerged from government headquarters after holding a press conference.
Leung was hustled away while security officials forced the students back, escorting them from the grounds as dozens of journalists joined the melee.
“This is a warning. Your actions have already severely disrupted order here,” police said over loudspeakers, while in response protesters chanted: “Hong Kong belongs to us!”
Leung told the press conference that authorities had “paid close attention to the demands for the election in 2017 by the university students” and that Beijing’s proposals were an improvement on the current state of democracy in Hong Kong, whose leader is currently appointed by a pro-government panel.
“You can see that he has no intention of having a dialogue with the students,” said Alex Chow, chairman of the Hong Kong Federation of Students and one of the activists who challenged Leung.
Chow threatened an escalation of the protest action if Leung refuses to speak with the students within 48 hours.
The park outside the Hong Kong government’s Tamar headquarters took on a carnival atmosphere as protesters trickled in under the summer sun, to attend a programme including lectures on the lawns.
“The government officials, the legislators, they can look out their window and see us calling for true democracy,” 20-year-old political science student Ester Wong said.
“This park has a lot of significance in Hong Kong protest movements, and we’re here to continue that tradition,” she said, huddled with others under the shade of trees and tents.
The students are heartened by past successes, including the government’s 2012 climbdown on a plan to implement patriotism classes which was abandoned in the face of mass protests outside government headquarters.
“Someone needs to take the lead in showing the government they’re wrong, and this time it’s up to the students,” said 19-year-old theatre student Ryan Lo. “We oppose the Chinese government trying to limit the freedoms Hong Kong people deserve.”           AFP