Hong Kong soccer fans jeer Chinese anthem ahead of China match
By Sangmi ChaHongkongers gesture as they chant slogans before a soccer match between Hong Kong and China outside Busan Asiad Stadium in Busan.
BUSAN, South Korea -- Hong Kong football fans greeted the Chinese national anthem with jeers on Wednesday before their team’s clash with China at a tournament in Busan as the political turmoil that has gripped the former British colony spilled over to the sports world.
The Korea Football Association said it had taken steps to ensure there were no banners bearing political messages at the Busan Asiad Stadium, where nearly 200 Hong Kong fans chanted and banged drums to drown out a tiny pocket of Chinese supporters.
Hong Kong has been rocked by six months of mass demonstrations, with protesters angered by what they see as Beijing’s stifling of freedoms despite a “one country, two systems” promise of autonomy when the city returned to Chinese rule in 1997.
China rejects the suggestion it is interfering in Hong Kong, and blames Western countries for inciting the trouble.
Hong Kong, designated the home side for Wednesday’s match in the four-team tournament that also includes hosts South Korea and Japan, were dressed all in red and turned to face their flag when the anthem began.
The Chinese players, dressed in yellow, turned the opposite way to face their flag and belted out the anthem as it was being played, while boos rang out from the section housing Hong Kong fans.
Television coverage of the match in Hong Kong did not show the anthem being played, instead cutting in as the players were shaking hands.When Chinese player Ji Xiang scored the first goal in the ninth minute, the Hong Kong fans booed and shouted in English: “Let’s go Hong Kong, let’s go!”
Chinese fans tried make themselves heard in the cavernous 50,000-seater stadium as Hong Kong supporters chanted: “We are Hong Kong” throughout the match.
University student Ben Wan, 21, said he flew in to watch the tournament and said the match against China had taken on a different edge due to the unrest back home in Hong Kong.
Wan, who was wearing a black mask, said: “I think the games against China are much more important than the previous because ... in Hong Kong there is political cleavage, it is becoming more and more serious.
“If we win I think ... there’s some significance to the protest because something like ‘Oh we beat China’ in some sense.”
Hong Kong has been rocked by six months of mass demonstrations, with protesters angered by what they see as Beijing’s stifling of freedoms despite a “one country, two systems” promise of autonomy when the city returned to Chinese rule in 1997.
China rejects the suggestion it is interfering in Hong Kong, and blames Western countries for inciting the trouble.
Hong Kong, designated the home side for Wednesday’s match in the four-team tournament that also includes hosts South Korea and Japan, were dressed all in red and turned to face their flag when the anthem began.
The Chinese players, dressed in yellow, turned the opposite way to face their flag and belted out the anthem as it was being played, while boos rang out from the section housing Hong Kong fans.
Television coverage of the match in Hong Kong did not show the anthem being played, instead cutting in as the players were shaking hands.When Chinese player Ji Xiang scored the first goal in the ninth minute, the Hong Kong fans booed and shouted in English: “Let’s go Hong Kong, let’s go!”
Chinese fans tried make themselves heard in the cavernous 50,000-seater stadium as Hong Kong supporters chanted: “We are Hong Kong” throughout the match.
University student Ben Wan, 21, said he flew in to watch the tournament and said the match against China had taken on a different edge due to the unrest back home in Hong Kong.
Wan, who was wearing a black mask, said: “I think the games against China are much more important than the previous because ... in Hong Kong there is political cleavage, it is becoming more and more serious.
“If we win I think ... there’s some significance to the protest because something like ‘Oh we beat China’ in some sense.”
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