Subject: Hong Kongers to demand democracy from China official
sulasno
Master Mongerer
Rank: 8Rank: 8



UID 190
Digest Posts 0
Credits 6524
Posts 6414
Karma 6523
Acceptance 19
Reading Access 80
Registered 23-2-2007
Status Offline
Post at 27-12-2007 13:43  Profile P.M. 
Font size: S M L
Hong Kongers to demand democracy from China official

Hong Kong (dpa) - Up to 1,000 pro-democracy activists are expected to take part in a march to present a petition demanding democracy in Hong Kong to a visiting Chinese official on Saturday.


Organizers of the protest said Thursday they would attempt to present their petition to Qiao Xiaoyang, deputy secretary general of the National People's Congress Standing Committee.


Qiao is to talk with legislators and business leaders about Hong Kong's political development at a meeting in the city's Convention and Exhibition centre.


The official is expected to confirm that China will not allow universal suffrage in Hong Kong in 2012 even though repeated opinion polls show that most people in the former British colony want full democracy as soon as possible.


Beijing will instead give its backing to a blueprint for political reform drawn up by Hong Kong's China-appointed chief executive which advocates limited universal suffrage from 2017 onwards.


Pro-democracy legislators and activists have reacted with dismay to the development and say they may switch tactics because they believe their voices are not being heard in Beijing.


Legislator Ronny Tong said his colleagues may boycott the legislature and call on the public to join in street protests. "This is going to be a long fight," he said in one interview published Thursday.


He said pro-democracy supporters were willing to spend time in jail in the course of their protests, adding: "Rational dialogue is no use when dealing with the central government."


Tong, speaking on government-run radio station RTHK, said there was "less and less room to be a moderate" as China was refusing to speak to even the most moderate of democrats.


Only half of Hong Kong's legislators are currently directly elected and there is no popular vote for the chief executive, who is chosen by an 800-member mostly pro-China election committee.


Hong Kong, which reverted to Chinese rule in 1997 after 156 years as a British colony, is technically entitled to full democracy from 2007 under the terms of its mini-constitution.


However, China, while saying universal suffrage is the ultimate goal for Hong Kong, is known to be deeply uneasy about the territory's pro-democracy movement and has so far refused to put a date on free elections in the city of 6.9 million.






Top
 


All times are GMT+8, the time now is 27-4-2024 23:46

Powered by Discuz! 5.0.0 © 2001-2006 Comsenz Inc.
Processed in 0.018006 second(s), 7 queries , Gzip enabled

Clear Cookies - Contact Us - ZH141
Disclaimer: This forum is operated as a real-time bulletin board system. ZH141.COM carries no legal liability on its contents. All messages are solely composed and up-loaded by readers and their opinions do not represent our stand. Readers are reminded that the contents on this forum may not convey reliable information thus it is readers' own responsibility to judge the validity, completeness and truthfulness of the messages. For messages related to medical, legal or investment issues, readers should always seek advice from professionals. Due to the limitation of the forum's real-time up-loading nature, ZH141.com is not able to monitor all the messages posted. Should readers find any problems regarding the messages, do contact us. ZH141.COM reserves the rights to delete or preserve any messages and reject anyone from joining this forum. ZH141.COM reserves all the legal rights.