230,000 March in Hong Kong to Tell Mainland Chinese Tourists Why They Protest

Frank Fang
By Frank Fang
July 7, 2019Hong Kong
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230,000 March in Hong Kong to Tell Mainland Chinese Tourists Why They Protest
Protesters carry umbrellas during a march to the West Kowloon rail terminus against the proposed extradition bill and before a clash with police in the Mong Kok district in Kowloon in Hong Kong on July 7, 2019. (Hector Retamal/AFP/Getty Images)

Hundreds of thousands of Hongkongers took to the streets in the afternoon of July 7 as the latest action to demand the city government to scrap a controversial extradition bill.

Sunday’s march, however, differed from past ones: rather than being directed at the government, the protesters appealed to mainland Chinese tourists. Fliers explaining the public’s concerns about the extradition bill were distributed along the march route to onlookers.

Organizers announced in the evening that an estimated 230,000 people took part in the march. Local police gave a much lower estimate, saying there were 56,000 people during the peak.

The targeted bill would allow any country, including mainland China, to seek extradition of criminal suspects. The proposal drew widespread opposition, with many Hongkongers worried that if the bill were to pass, Beijing could potentially pressure the city government to hand over citizens of any nationality to face trial in the Chinese regime’s opaque court system that often disregards rule of law.

There have been three major protests in recent weeks: a march on June 9 that drew 1.03 million people; a march on June 16 that drew a historic 2 million participants; and another march on July 1 with over half a million attendees. Though the city’s top official, Chief Executive Carrie Lam, announced on June 15 that the bill would be indefinitely suspended, many continue to call for the bill’s complete withdrawal.

Ventus Lau Wing-hong, one of the organizers behind the latest march, explained that he hoped visiting mainland Chinese tourists could learn the truth about why Hongkongers were protesting, since Beijing has either censored the news, or misrepresented the facts in its state media coverage.

The march route took protesters through two locations that Chinese tourists often visit: Tsim Sha Tsui, a popular shopping district with luxury shops in the Kowloon district, and the West Kowloon railway station, the terminus of the Guangzhou–Shenzhen–Hong Kong Express Rail Link that travels to and from the two southern Chinese metropolises. The station also contains a cross-border checkpoint for mainland Chinese tourists traveling into Hong Kong.

Protesters began marching from the initial gathering point, Salisbury Garden in Tsim Sha Tsui, at around 3:35 p.m. local time, 25 minutes before originally scheduled, due to the large turnout.

According to Hong Kong media Stand News, the large turnout forced some protesters to take an alternative route to the final destination, the West Kowloon station.

Why Taking Part

A college senior surnamed Chan joined the march with her parents, saying that they participated because the Hong Kong government has not heard their voices, despite continued protests.

“We cannot let this fire be extinguished so quickly. We haven’t gotten any of our demands yet. So I believe that every time there is an online call to action, we should continue to step out and voice our opinions, so that the international community can continue to care about [the extradition bill],” Chan said in an interview with local Epoch Times reporters.

Chan added that the bill was the latest example of Beijing violating the ‘one country, two systems’ principle, under which China promised to preserve Hong Kong’s autonomy and freedoms when the city’s sovereignty was handed over from Britain to China in 1997.

“‘One country, two systems’ now exists in name only. Because [Beijing] has infiltrated Hong Kong more and more, whether it is manipulating Hong Kong’s legislative elections, or passing certain ordinances in total disregard to Hong Kong’s judicial independence.”

Mr. Fung, a retailer, said that if he didn’t come out to join the march today, he might not have a chance to voice his opinions in the future.

Meanwhile, To Chi-kuen told The Epoch Times that he had also taken part in the Umbrella Movement in 2014, when locals occupied main thoroughfares for 79 days to demand universal suffrage. Those protests had ended without changes to the electoral system.

He said Beijing has not only oppressed Hongkongers but also its own people inside mainland China.

“We want to tell every Chinese, that the [government] that oppresses both Hongkongers and mainland Chinese, is totalitarian,” To said.

Protester Demands

Along the march, protesters could be heard chanting slogans: “Release protesters who have been arrested, investigate police’s excessive use of force, immediately hold two open elections.” 24 were arrested after clashes with police on June 10 and 12, when officers fired tear gas, rubber bullets, and bean bags into crowds; while 12 were arrested after clashes on July 1 morning. Another was recently arrested for his alleged involvement in storming the legislature building on July 1 evening. Some have since been released on bail.

Local newspaper Apple Daily tallied several who were arrested for online behavior, such as allegedly launching cyberattacks on the police website and releasing police officers’ personal information.

The three demands, along with the bill’s full withdrawal and a request for the government to retract its previous characterization of protests as “riots,” were the five demands set forth by march organizers.

Protesters have recently added the demand of universal suffrage in how the city elects its chief executive and members of its unicameral legislature, echoing the Umbrella Movement. Currently, the chief executive is voted in by an electoral committee comprised of mostly pro-Beijing elites, while only a portion of lawmakers in the legislature are directly elected by constituents in a geographical area.

Hong Kong bureau of The Epoch Times contributed to this report.

From The Epoch Times

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