The Freeman

China faces defiance in Hkong vote reform

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HONG KONG — Hong Kong pro-democracy lawmakers disrupted a Beijing official’s speech yesterday as he sought to explain a decision announced over the weekend to tightly limit voting reforms for the southern Chinese financial hub.

The legislator­s chanted slogans and held up placards accusing China’s central government of breaking its promise to let Hong Kong directly elect its leader. Some stood on chairs and pumped their fists, waving signs that said “Shameful” and “Loss of faith.”

The noisy demonstrat­ion at the start of the speech by Li Fei, a deputy secretary general of the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress, China’s legislatur­e, was a rare occasion on which a Beijing official faced open defiance.

Li continued his speech after security officers hustled the lawmakers out of the auditorium, to applause from other members of the audience, including lawmakers and local councilors from pro-es- tablishmen­t parties and business leaders.

Police used pepper spray on members of a radical activist group that attempted to storm metal barricades and enter the venue.

On Sunday, Beijing inflamed political tensions by ruling out open nomination­s of candidates running for Hong Kong’s top job in inaugural elections in 2017. The widely expected announceme­nt set the stage for escalating confrontat­ions between China’s central government and democracy supporters in Hong Kong who have pledged to carry out a civil disobedien­ce campaign that could culminate in a mass protest to cripple the city’s financial district.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Security guards try to stop a pro-democracy protester showing a placard “We want democracy” against Li Fei, on the podium, deputy general secretary of National People’s Congress Standing Committee, during a briefing session in Hong Kong.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Security guards try to stop a pro-democracy protester showing a placard “We want democracy” against Li Fei, on the podium, deputy general secretary of National People’s Congress Standing Committee, during a briefing session in Hong Kong.

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