vendredi 9 août 2019

Thousands of protesters sit in at Hong Kong airport to reiterate their ‘five demands’

  • “Please forgive us for the ‘unexpected’ Hong Kong,” said the leaflets that were handed out to arrival passengers at the Hong Kong International Airport. “You’ve arrived in a broken, torn-apart city, not the one you have once pictured. Yet for this Hong Kong, we fight.”
  • The demonstrations started as peaceful political rallies in June but have escalated to a wider, pro-democracy movement.
By Grace Shao


Several hundreds of protesters, many of them young and donning black T-shirts, handed out anti-government flyers in more than 16 languages to arrival passengers at the Hong Kong International Airport on Friday.
“Please forgive us for the ‘unexpected’ Hong Kong,” the English leaflets read. 
“You’ve arrived in a broken, torn-apart city, not the one you have once pictured. Yet for this Hong Kong, we fight,” the flyers said according to Reuters.
Protesters said they wanted to reiterate their demands and put their case “in front of an international audience,” according to social media posts from demonstrators.
The massive travel hub connects the city to more than 220 global destinations and served 74.7 million passengers last year, according to the airport’s website.
Airport authorities said only departing passengers with travel documents will be allowed to enter Terminal 1 on Friday morning, as the airport braces for what protesters are describing as a three-day event. 
The terminal serves long-haul flights.
Online platforms such as Instagram, Telegram, Airdrop and local Hong Kong forums have become the main means of organization among protesters because they give some anonymity to users.
The demands were originally released in July, a day after a small group of protesters stormed the Hong Kong legislature:
  1. a full withdrawal of a proposed bill that would allow Hong Kong people to be extradited to mainland China
  2. a retraction of any characterization of the movement as a “riot”
  3. a retraction of charges against anti-extradition protesters
  4. an independent committee to investigate the Hong Kong police’s use of force
  5. universal suffrage in elections for the city’s chief executive officer and legislature by 2020.
So far, Hong Kong authorities have given no concessions, though Chief Executive Carrie Lam “suspended” the extradition bill last month.
Thursday afternoon in the United States, a U.S. State Department spokeswoman called China a “thuggish regime” for disclosing photographs and personal details of a U.S. diplomat who met with student leaders of Hong Kong’s pro-democracy movement.
Beijing on Wednesday released a photo showing leaders of the movement — including Joshua Wong, the face and leader of the 2014 Umbrella Movement— with an American diplomat. 
Chinese authorities have asked the U.S. to explain why that contact was made and to explain the nature of their relationship.
On Friday morning, officials confirmed that the police commander who dealt with the 2014 demonstrations has been recalled to help settle the ongoing social unrest.
Alan Lau Yip-shing, a former deputy police commissioner, has been appointed to handle large-scale public order events and to direct activities around the 70th anniversary of the founding of the People’s Republic of China, which is October 1.

Why are Hong Kongers protesting?

Hundreds of thousands of people in Hong Kong have taken to the streets since early June, spurred by opposition to a bill that would allow people in Hong Kong to be extradited to mainland China
That proposal has been suspended — though not fully withdrawn.
Demonstrations have since evolved into a movement calling for autonomy, full democracy and the ousting of the embattled leader Lam.
Beijing has responded saying Hong Kong is facing its worst crisis since the handover from the United Kingdom in 1997, and the communist government has used increasingly pointed language to describe the protests.

Problems that go beyond politics
The demonstrations started as peaceful political rallies but have escalated to a broader, pro-democracy movement. 
The size of crowds on the streets and rising violence have called the well-being of Asia’s financial hub into question.
Flights were canceled by Hong Kong’s largest airline, Cathay Pacific on Monday, as part of a general strike that halted the city.
The United States raised its travel warning for Hong Kong on Wednesday, advising Americans to exercise caution when visiting the city.
Also Wednesday, a senior Cathay Pacific executive said the company is facing a decline in bookings for travel to Hong Kong. 
The “double digits” drop is largely due to widespread protests in the Asian financial center, he said.
Retail, real estate and other business sectors have also seen sales declines over the last few months. The city’s public transit system has also been disrupted on multiple occasions.
The discontent from protesters may go beyond politics. 
While the city’s rich have grown richer, the wealth gap in the city has grown wider, according to David Dodwell, a long-time observer of Asia politics.
Many people feel left behind and neglected by the government, and their frustration is fueling increasingly disruptive protests that have coursed through the city, said Dodwell, who is executive director at HK-APEC Trade Policy Group and a former Financial Times Asia correspondent.
“There is a very widespread anxiety in Hong Kong among the ordinary working person about their prospects going forward,” Dodwell told CNBC. 
He added that more than 90% of local Hong Kongers work for small and medium-sized enterprises, which have not seen the kind of economic growth that big multinational corporations have.

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