Hong Kong democracy groups take to streets as key vote looms

Hong Kong democracy groups take to streets as key vote looms

HONG KONG - Agence France-Presse

People march during a pro-democracy rally in Hong Kong on June 14, 2015. Pro-democracy campaigners took to the streets of Hong Kong on June 14, but in far smaller numbers than expected, before a vote on a political reform package that has divided the city and sparked mass protests. AFP Photo

Pro-democracy campaigners took to the streets of Hong Kong June 14, but in far smaller numbers than expected, before a vote on a political reform package that has divided the city and sparked mass protests.

The controversial electoral roadmap, which lays out how Hong Kong's next leader should be chosen, goes for debate at the legislature on June 17 and will be voted on by the end of the week.
 
It is the culmination of a fraught chapter which saw tens of thousands of pro-democracy protesters bring parts of the city to a standstill late last year.
 
Those rallies were sparked by a ruling from Beijing that candidates in the city's first ever public vote for its leader in 2017 must be vetted.
 
Pro-democracy lawmakers in the semi-autonomous Chinese city have vowed to vote down the election package, which sticks to Beijing's ruling.
 
Currently the chief executive is elected by a 1,200-strong pro-Beijing committee.
 
More than 1,000 people set off from the city's Victoria Park on June 14 afternoon, heading towards the legislative council building where they are due to rally into the evening.
 
With temperatures soaring to 30 degrees Celsius (86 degrees Fahrenheit) and humidity at almost 80 percent, numbers were well below organisers' hopes as the march began -- they had said they expected 50,000 to join.    


AFP Photo


The June 14 gathering is the first of a series of rallies which activists say will take place each day until lawmakers vote on the bill.
 
Despite fragmentation in the pro-democracy camp, all the key players from last year's protests, which became known as the Umbrella Movement, are set to take part.
 
"Vetoing (the bill) is not something to be happy about," said Labour Party lawmaker Lee Cheuk Yan, addressing the crowd on June 14.    

"It shows Hong Kong people have the courage to veto the rotten proposal, but it doesn't mean we have won."  

Latest figures from one joint university poll showed those against the reform package taking the lead for the first time with 43 percent, versus 41.7 in support.    

"People may feel exhausted  and directionless, but... we need to fight on to get back our Hong Kong, and our basic political rights," added Johnson Yeung of Civil Human Rights Front, which organised the march.
         
Marchers held placards demanding "true universal suffrage" and yellow umbrellas, symbol of the pro-democracy movement.    

"Coming out is an expression of our stance. There is nothing else we can do other than this," said Lam Sum-shing, 73.
 
Authorities have warned activists to distance themselves from "troublemakers" and said they have heightened security at the government complex.
 
Police cleared what they called "dangerous objects" including bottles and wooden planks from a small protest camp outside the legislature June 13.    

Last year's mass protests saw sporadic violence, with thousands joining the demonstrations after police fired tear gas.
 
With the reform package expected to be blocked by pan-democrats, who have enough votes to stop it, analysts say there is little hope of a quick resolution to the political impasse.
 
"If the Beijing and Hong Kong governments continue to adopt hostile attitudes towards the opposition, it will be difficult for them to change the situation," said Ma Ngok, associate professor at Chinese University's department of government and public administration.
 
There is also pressure on the democracy movement, said Ma.    

"What they can do to bring genuine democracy is a challenging question for them."  

Hong Kong's deputy leader Carrie Lam appealed June 14 to lawmakers to pass the bill.
 
"They should take into account the broad and long-term interest of Hong Kong and change their mind," she told reporters.
 
Hong Kong, which was handed back to China by Britain in 1997, has much greater freedoms than the mainland but there are fears that these are being eroded.  


AP Photo