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Students join HK democracy protests

Published: 27 Sep 2014 - 01:46 am | Last Updated: 20 Jan 2022 - 07:12 pm

Students who joined democracy protests attend a lecture near Tamar Park in Hong Kong yesterday.

HONG KONG:  Nearly 1,000 Hong Kong secondary school pupils, some wearing uniforms, joined university students yesterday to bolster a days-long protest against Beijing’s refusal to grant the city unfettered democracy.
Throngs of teenage students -- many saying they had defied their parents’ wishes -- descended on the Southern Chinese city’s government headquarters to add their voices to a class boycott kicked off by university students on Monday. 
Student groups are spearheading a civil disobedience campaign along with democracy activists in protest at Beijing’s decision to vet who can stand for Hong Kong’s top post of chief executive at the next election.
University students rallied a crowd on Monday that organisers said was 13,000-strong on a campus in the north of the city and breathing new life into a movement left stunned by Beijing’s hardline stance.
On Thursday night, more than 2,000 people took their protest to the residence of Hong Kong leader Leung Chun-ying with the hope of speaking directly to him. Leung has so far refused to speak with the students or meet their leaders. 
Protests continued yesterday morning with around 900 secondary school students as young as 13 gathering outside the city’s main government complex shouting: “I want real elections not fake ones.”
“The government is ignoring our voices so I think that if we have so many secondary students boycotting the classes maybe then they will be willing to listen to us,” Agnes Yeung, a high school student, said.                            AFP