Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Jimmy Sham. Afficher tous les articles
Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Jimmy Sham. Afficher tous les articles

jeudi 2 janvier 2020

Vox Populi

More Than a Million Hongkongers Celebrate New Year’s Day by Taking to Streets to Renew Their Demands
BY FRANK FANG

Protesters hold up placards with the words “Five Demands, Not One Less” in a march in Hong Kong on Jan. 1, 2020.

Protesters marched in downtown Hong Kong on the first day of 2020, demanding that the Hong Kong government answer their demands.
The march was abruptly called off by police at around 6 p.m. local time despite the fact that CHRF had obtained police approval to hold the march from 3 p.m. to 10 p.m. on Wednesday.
Despite the sudden cancellation, the turnout was high; CHRF estimated that more than 1.03 million took part, according to a statement published on its Facebook page.
Tens of thousands of people take part in a peaceful march in Hong Kong on Jan. 1, 2020.

The march was organized by local pro-democracy group Civil Human Rights Front (CHRF), which has held several large-scale demonstrations since ongoing protests in Hong Kong began in June last year.
Prior to the march, a rally was held at Victoria Park where multiple activists spoke, including pro-democracy activist Ventus Lau and student activist Sunny Cheung.
Cheng called for more protests in the new year and shouted a popular protest slogan, “Heaven Will Destroy the CCP [the Chinese Communist Party],” saying that the CCP is the enemy of Hongkongers.
He also called on sanctions for all pro-Beijing companies that “turn their backs” on Hong Kong and befriend the Chinese regime.
Jimmy Sham, CHRF’s convener, while speaking to the press ahead of the march, stated that the purpose of the march was to reiterate the protesters’ longstanding five demands, which include universal suffrage and an independent inquiry into instances of police violence against protesters.
Sham also criticized the city government for suppressing Spark Alliance, a local nonprofit that raises money for legal and medical aid for arrested protesters.
On Dec. 19, the police froze Spark Alliance’s bank account, which contained roughly HK$70 million (about $9 million), alleging that three men and one woman from the group were suspected of “money laundering.”
Local teachers have also been punished for supporting the protests.
On Dec. 20, Hong Kong’s Education Secretary Kevin Yeung called on schools to suspend teachers who have been arrested for offenses relating to the protests, according to local media RTHK.
He added that 80 teachers had been arrested since June.
Sham called on protesters to join newly created pro-democracy unions in their line of work—which have set up booths along the march route—so that future strikes could be better organized.
Two protesters hold up placards demanding universal suffrage in an assembly in Victoria Park in Hong Kong on Jan. 1, 2020. 

At Victoria Park, more than a dozen protesters were seen holding U.S. flags, while many others donned oversized animal masks in the guise of popular cartoons, Pepes and Linden Pigs.
“We protest at the beginning of this year, to remind us and international friends that, let’s not forget and get used to police violence and state repression, and demonstrate our solidarity,” CHRF stated in a declaration published on its Facebook page.

March
At around 2:40 p.m. local time, protesters began marching from Victoria Park to the final destination of Chater Road in Central.
Leading the march were several local pro-democracy politicians, including Andrew Chiu and Ho Kai-ming.
Protesters could be heard shouting slogans such as “Five Demands Not One Less,” “Not Afraid of Being Oppressed, We Walk Shoulder to Shoulder,” and “Oppose Police, Join Unions.”
They also held placards with different messages, including “Keep Our Commitment, Stand As One,” “Heaven Will Destroy the CCP,” “Never Give Up, Show Justice to the World,” and “2020 Liberate Hong Kong.”
A small group of protesters holding U.S. flags sang the U.S. national anthem.
At around 4 p.m. local time, the first group of protesters arrived at the final destination.
There still remained a large number of protesters who had yet to step out of Victoria Park.
About an hour later, a clash broke out between a small group of protesters and the police at Hennessy Road in Wan Chai, located about midway between Chater Road and Victoria Park.

What exactly led to the clash remains unclear; police soon fired tear gas and pepper spray and made several arrests.
RTHK reported that the police fired pepper spray directly at one of its video journalists at the scene.
At 5:40 p.m. local time, local police issued a press release, saying that it had arrested 5 “rioters” for vandalizing a bank at the junction of Hennessy Road and Luard Road.
CHRF has since issued a statement on its Facebook, saying that the police have contacted the group and demanded that the organizer call off the assembly by 6:15 p.m. local time.
Several netizens have left messages on CHRF’s Facebook post, saying that the police had intentionally created chaos for the purpose of ending the peaceful assembly.
On the messaging app Telegram, which has been widely used by Hong Kong protesters for communications and organizing events, users suspected that the people who vandalized the bank were not protesters, but police officers themselves.
The police denied the accusation with a second press release.
At 6:46 p.m. local time, CHRF issued a statement denouncing the police’s “brutal decision” to end the march early.Protesters hold up U.S. flags in a march in Hong Kong on Jan. 1, 2020.

It pointed out that police escalated tensions at Luard Road after firing tear gas into the crowd.
It also criticized the police for “searching and provoking citizens” upon deploying riot police at metro stations near the parade route.
“On the first day of year 2020, the Police dismissed the first licensed assembly of the year with absurd excuse. Hong Kong government have shown its unwillingness to listen to the voices of the mass, infringing the right of assembly of Hong Kong citizens,” CHRF stated.
At 8 p.m. local time, Hong Kong media Apple Daily reported that police arrested over 100 people who had not yet left the parade route near the Sogo shopping mall.

mardi 26 novembre 2019

Meet 5 of Hong Kong’s Newest Politicians

The pro-democracy camp’s stunning victory in citywide district elections means a younger class of political neophytes will soon take office.
By Austin Ramzy

Pro-democracy winning candidates outside the campus of Hong Kong Polytechnic University on Monday.

HONG KONG — Hong Kong’s district council election saw the pro-establishment camp have one of its biggest defeats since the territory returned to Chinese control 22 years ago, as dozens of seasoned politicians were replaced with a crop of newcomers, many of whom were inspired to run by the antigovernment protests.
The district councils are local advisory bodies that do not hold any lawmaking power, but the lopsided results were seen as a strong public endorsement of the continuing protest movement. Several newly elected district council members seized on the demands of the demonstrators as part of their campaign platforms, and seem eager to push their roles beyond the usual remit of neighborhood noise complaints and sanitation problems.
Here’s a look at five of the most interesting new district councilors and what they have to say:

Lucifer Siu
Mr. Siu, 40, embraced the image of a protester in his campaign. 
A campaign photo features him in a yellow hard hat, goggles and a gas mask with his fingers extended to represent the demands of the protest movement, including calling for an investigation into use of force by the police, amnesty for arrested protesters and expanded democracy.


𝕛𝕒𝕞𝕖𝕤 𝕘𝕣𝕚𝕗𝕗𝕚𝕥𝕙𝕤
✔@jgriffiths

· Nov 20, 2019
Replying to @jgriffiths
A couple of other observations: still very few ethnic minorities running (I counted three); lots of candidates talking about improving animal/pet provisions, particularly in public housing; still an amazing number of people sending in handwritten, barely legible flyers.



𝕛𝕒𝕞𝕖𝕤 𝕘𝕣𝕚𝕗𝕗𝕚𝕥𝕙𝕤
✔@jgriffiths

Lucifer Siu, standing in Mong Kok North, has perhaps the most "I'm a protester" flyer of all 1,090. By contrast, super anti-protest flyers in a minority, with Johnny Ip's in Tuen Mun being a rare example. Most focused on security, stability etc without direct mention of unrest.

117
7:34 AM - Nov 20, 2019

Mr. Siu said he ran for the sake of his 2-year-old daughter, but had not expected to win. 
“I am no super man, not a social worker, not someone who speaks out for the people,” he wrote on Facebook
“But I hope that others can stand up for themselves, and I want to create a platform to give others the platform to speak up.”

Jocelyn Chau
Ms. Chau, 23, who works as a relationship manager at a bank in North Point, was arrested in August while live-streaming a protest, but she was never charged. 
She subsequently received harassing phone calls and was shoved and punched in the head while campaigning in October, one of several candidates who was assaulted during the campaign.


Ray Chan
✔@ray_slowbeat

Jocelyn Chau is community organizer in #HongKong Eastern District's City Garden Ward. She was filming live for residents she serves, 2 cops turned back & pushed her down to the ground for filming them. She refused bail & was released without charges. She was treated for bruises.

233
1:31 PM - Aug 13, 2019 · Eastern District, Hong Kong

She condemned the authorities for failing to respond adequately to the violence surrounding the campaign. 
“We are innocent people who’ve been attacked,” she said.
Ms. Chau defeated Hui Ching On, 53, a financial consultant who had held the seat since 1999. 
HK01, a Hong Kong news outlet, reported that during the previous four years, Mr. Hui had only spoken for 80 seconds during district council meetings.

Jimmy Sham
Jimmy Sham, leader of the Civil Human Rights Front, an umbrella group of pro-democracy organizations, outside Hong Kong Polytechnic University on Monday.

Mr. Sham, 32, was another candidate who was assaulted during the campaign. 
He was attacked by a group of men with hammers last month and continues to use crutches to walk.
As a leader of the Civil Human Rights Front, an umbrella group of pro-democracy organizations, Mr. Sham helped organize several large, peaceful marches this summer. 
He was attacked previously, in August, on a day when the police announced they were banning plans for another march.
Ray Chan, a pro-democracy lawmaker who is gay, celebrated the victory of Mr. Sham, who is also gay, on a day that several establishment politicians who had opposed same-sex marriage and made homophobic comments had lost their district council races.
Mr. Sham said that his own victory in the district race reflected a broader yearning for civic freedoms. “We are trying to listen to the demands of the people and to fight for their rights,” he said.

Cathy Yau
Cathy Yau, a former police officer, on the streets of Hong Kong in September.

Public criticism of the police and the officers’ use of force have been animating issues of the protest movement. 
Few embodied the issue more than Ms. Yau, 36, who formerly served as a police officer but quit this year after more than a decade on the force.
“This year, I have decided to take off my uniform and gear, and stand together with Hong Kongers,” she said in announcing her campaign.
Ms. Yau defeated Yolanda Ng, who had held the seat since 2007 and ran uncontested four years ago.
“The Hong Kong police force has become a political tool,” Ms. Yau wrote last week, adding that “police brutality and indiscriminate arrests have clearly illustrated the inseparable relationship between politics and society.”

Chan Tsz-wai
With his handwritten candidate introduction, Mr. Chan, a 27-year-old student, showed he was a political novice with no powerful backing. 
But despite his inexperience, he defeated Chris Ip, 39, a prominent figure in the Democratic Alliance for the Betterment and Progress of Hong Kong, the largest pro-Beijing party.


Jeffie Lam
✔@jeffielam

One of the unthinkable of #HKDCelection is how this 27yo student, who handwrote his electoral message to voters, had defeated Chris Ip, a rising star in the biggest pro-Beijing party AND the *chairman* of the Yau Tsim Mong district council.
4,188
2:48 AM - Nov 25, 2019

Mr. Ip, who was the chairman of the Yau Tsim Mong district council, became a target of protesters in July after he blocked debate on the extradition bill that incited the protests this summer.