Text: | Print|

    HK leader says protests hatched for more than one year

    2014-10-16 08:42 China Daily Web Editor: Qian Ruisha
    1

    Unlawful street assemblies in Hong Kong that halted traffic were described by the city's leader on Wednesday as a plot hatched more than a year ago that went out of control when put into operation.

    The idea of pushing the central government to accept an electoral reform package by setting up blockades in the heart of Hong Kong first emerged in January 2013.

    The initiator, law professor Benny Tai Yiu-ting, soon turned the idea into an advocacy group.

    Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying told reporters on Wednesday that the "Occupy Central" movement was not initiated by the masses, and spontaneous acts by the protesters indicated that the organizers had no control over the crowds.

    "The Occupy Central movement was obviously not conceived by the masses from Day One more than a year ago. Someone plotted it," said Leung. "We can see that they are well organized, supplied with manpower and resources."

    Hurting Hong Kong society will not result in a satisfactory scenario for the election of the city's leader by universal suffrage in 2017, Leung said. He appealed for the protest leaders to adopt a pragmatic and rational attitude for talks on reform.

    Leung's remarks came after Zhang Xiaoming, director of the central government liaison office in Hong Kong, described the street protests as a "socio-political event" that challenged Beijing's authority.

    Zhang told the city's legislators on Tuesday that the central government is deeply concerned about the situation in Hong Kong, as the protests have jeopardized the city's rule of law, relations with the mainland and its global reputation.

    Soon after Zhang's closed-door exchanges with lawmakers, hundreds of protesters halted traffic on a road running across Hong Kong Island. At one point, angry mobs surrounded a thin line of police officers.

    But the protest only lasted for four hours. Dozens of riot police using pepper spray pushed protesters out of a tunnel near the government headquarters. Officers arrested 37 men and eight women amid the chaos.

    Twenty injuries had been reported by Tuesday afternoon, including five police officers. The duties of seven officers were reassigned after they allegedly beat a protester.

    Police made no new attempts on Wednesday to break up the blockades.

    Secretary for Security Lai Tung-kwok said that as the situation remains volatile, the authorities are focusing on partially restoring traffic flow.

    Secretary for Constitutional and Mainland Affairs Raymond Tam Chi-yuen said the administration is seeking a resumption of dialogue with the student leaders, with the help of a "well-respected" middleman.

    Chairman of the Cheung Kong Holdings conglomerate Li Ka-shing, who is Asia's wealthiest man, appealed to the young activists to calm down and go home.

    Comments (0)
    Most popular in 24h
      Archived Content
    Media partners:

    Copyright ©1999-2018 Chinanews.com. All rights reserved.
    Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.

    主站蜘蛛池模板: 连山| 石渠县| 兴海县| 汉川市| 宿松县| 环江| 澄迈县| 邵阳市| 临沭县| 康马县| 博爱县| 德令哈市| 武宁县| 五莲县| 莫力| 濮阳县| 泸溪县| 垦利县| 土默特右旗| 鄂州市| 淮安市| 台东市| 大关县| 通城县| 明溪县| 黑河市| 黔西县| 五河县| 思南县| 徐水县| 永兴县| 台南市| 大埔县| 定襄县| 濮阳市| 武鸣县| 东兰县| 石棉县| 马尔康县| 静宁县| 饶阳县|