Over 1 Million Take to Streets of Hong Kong in Protest of Extradition Bill

Frank Fang
By Frank Fang
June 9, 2019Hong Kong
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Over 1 Million Take to Streets of Hong Kong in Protest of Extradition Bill
HONG KONG - JUNE 09: Protesters march on a street during a rally against a controversial extradition law proposal on June 9, 2019 in Hong Kong. Organizers say more than a million protesters marched in Hong Kong on Sunday against a bill that would allow suspected criminals to be sent to mainland China for trial as tensions have escalated in recent weeks. (Photo by Anthony Kwan/Getty Images)

Chants of “no China extradition, no evil law” echoed between the high-rise buildings that line the streets of Hong Kong.

In a bid to press the local government to scrap proposed changes to the city’s extradition laws that would allow mainland China to seek extradition of criminal suspects, an estimated 1.03 million people marched through the city in protest on June 9, according to Civil Human Rights Front, the march organizer.

The massive turnout makes it the biggest rally since 2003, when more than a half-million Hongkongers protested against Article 23, a controversial anti-subversion legislation that critics argued would target target free speech and groups suppressed by Beijing. The bill was eventually scrapped.

Local police gave much lower estimates for both protests. In 2003, police estimated 350,000 people turned up for the demonstration. On June 9, it gave an estimate of a mere 240,000.

The Hong Kong government first proposed amendments to the city’s extradition law in February, which would simplify the current case-by-case extraditions of criminal suspects via existing extradition treaties with 20 countries, including the United States. Instead, under the changes, the city’s top leader would have the authority to sign off on extradition requests, including from mainland China, without approval from the legislature, called the Legislative Council.

In recent months, a broad opposition, including lawyers, business executives, students, and ordinary citizens have organized parades, petitions, and other forms of protest, arguing that given the Chinese regime’s disregard for rule of law, the changes could allow Beijing to charge and extradite with impunity.

Sunday’s march was originally set to begin at 3 p.m. local time from the starting point in Victoria Park. But the march set out 30 minutes earlier at the demand of the local police due to the large number of protestors.

The Hong Kong bureau of The Epoch Times reported that crowd control measures were implemented at several subway stations on Hong Kong’s metro system.

At around 4 p.m., the first group of protestors arrived at the march’s destination, the Legislative Council building in the Admiralty neighborhood. Some protestors in the back were just starting to walk out from Victoria Park.

At about 9 p.m., the last segment of the march had still yet to arrive at the destination. There were also still people continuously joining the contingent.

Wary about Beijing

Since the bill was proposed, Western governments have also expressed their concern for hong Kong’s autonomy.

The U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission, in a report released May 7, stated “The extradition bill could pose significant risks to U.S. national security and economic interests in the territory,” adding that Beijing could pressure the Hong Kong government into extraditing U.S. expats “under false pretenses.”

HongKongers expressed similar worries while speaking with the Hong Kong bureau of The Epoch Times.

Ching Cheong, a veteran Hong Kong journalist, said the real purpose of the law was for Beijing to target people whom it considered a threat to its rule, under the pretense of boosting China’s national security.

“My understanding of national security is whether there would be a foreign invasion,” Ching explained. “But Beijing considers a threat to its rule as an issue of national security.”

Members from the Hong Kong Journalists Association and media commentators decided to participate in the march, after missing out on the protest in April 28 when 130,000 took to the streets, according to Ching.

“What we are seeing now is that lies told by the [Hong Kong] government are coming in waves,” Ching said. “John Lee Ka-chiu, Hong Kong’s Secretary for Security, even said that the rule of law [in China] was ranked high globally. He was simply lying.”

In comments made earlier this week, Lee sought to dismiss concerns about China’s judicial system by saying its ranking on the World Economic Forum was relatively good. But he incorrectly cited the statistics.

Foreign expats also attended the march. Brian Kern, who has lived in Hong Kong for the past 11 years, came with his two daughters.

“Like everyone else here today, I think it is very important for all Hong Kong people to stand up for Hong Kong against the [Chinese] Communist Party, and against its puppet here, the Hong Kong government,” Kern said.

Kern said recent conversations he had with people were mostly about whether he would continue to stay in Hong Kong, or whether local Hongkongers should try to leave the city.

“But the problem is, if everybody leaves, who is here to defend Hong Kong. I think it is a very tricky situation for people. And I think that’s what the [Chinese] Communist Party wants. It wants people like me to leave. And it just wants to fill Hong Kong with all these people coming from China,” Kern said.

Defending Hong Kong

Many Hong Kong university students also took part in the march. Ms. Chow, currently at the Hong Kong Polytechnic University, told the Hong Kong bureau of The Epoch Times, that at least 100 schoolmates have participated in the march.

“The goal for every one of us is to safeguard the home of Hong Kong people,” Chow said. “People will never accept the proposed amendments to the Fugitive Offenders Ordinance, which violates the ‘one country, two systems.’”

The “One country, two systems” model was proposed by Beijing after the city’s sovereignty was handed over from Britain to China in 1997, intended to preserve Hong Kong’s autonomy and freedoms while under mainland Chinese rule. However, the city has seen the encroaching influence of Beijing impact local politics, education, and freedom of the press in recent years.

Chow said that if the amendments were passed, it would create a “white terror” in Hong Kong.

“Nobody would then dare to challenge the central authorities [in Beijing],” Chow said. “It would violate the human rights that everyone is born with, including freedom of speech and freedom of assembly.”

Anson Chan, former chief secretary for both the British colonial government and the Hong Kong government after the handover, was among the protesters who took part in the march. That position is the most senior among department secretaries.

Chan said that the proposals would not only affect basic rights and freedom, but “also affect business confidence in Hong Kong, especially how it would be a blow to Hong Kong’s image as a top financial center.” In recent weeks, some in the business sector have expressed concern that the bill would impact investors’ perceptions of Hong Kong’s economic independence from China.

Chen called on Carrie Lam, the city’s top leader, to listen to the voice of the Hong Kong people, the international community, and other governments around the world.

“If [Lam] really treasures Hong Kong, and knows the city’s unique strength, she would not have taken the path that she is on right now,” Chan said.

Scores of protesters, including lawmakers in the Legislative Council, held placards and shouted slogans calling on Lam to resign.

Simultaneously, about 1,000 Australian Chinese gathered in Sydney for a protest urging the Australian government to condemn the Hong Kong bill.

“Ordinary people like me, I think, will live in perpetual fear of breaking some law in China, and as we’re passing through Hong Kong we’ll be arrested and extradited,” Ida Lee, an accountant, told Reuters.

Epoch Times reporters Sarah Liang, Lin Yi, and Wang Wenjun in Hong Kong contributed to the report.

From The Epoch Times

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