A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, December 1, 2014
Joshua Wong, two other HK student protesters on hunger strike
BY CLARE BALDWIN AND JAMES POMFRET-Mon Dec 1, 2014
(Reuters)
- Thousands of Hong Kong pro-democracy activists forced the temporary
closure of government headquarters on Monday after clashing with police,
defying orders to retreat after more than two months of sustained
protests in the Chinese-controlled city.
Hong Kong leader Leung Chun-ying said police had been tolerant but would
now take "resolute action", suggesting that patience may have finally
run out.
Speaking on a stage on Monday night in the heart of the Admiralty
protest site next to government headquarters, student leader Joshua Wong
said he and two others, including a secondary school student, would
start a hunger strike to pressure Beijing to grant Hong Kong full
democracy.
"Today, we have decided to do this because we feel have no other road to
take," said 18-year-old Wong, to loud applause and chants of support
from hundreds of protesters gathered in the rain.
He was speaking after chaos erupted as commuters made their way to work,
with hundreds of protesters surrounding Admiralty Centre, which houses
offices and retail outlets, in a stand-off with police. The central
government offices and the legislature were forced to close in the
morning, as were scores of shops.
The latest flare-up, during which police charged protesters with batons
and pepper spray, showed the frustration of protesters at Beijing's
refusal to budge on electoral reforms and grant greater democracy to the
former British colony.
"Some people have mistaken the police's tolerance for weakness," Leung
told reporters. "I call for students who are planning to return to the
occupation sites tonight not to do so."
He did not respond when asked if police would clear the sites on Monday.
Hong Kong Federation of Students leader Alex Chow said the protesters had intended to paralyse government headquarters.
"The plan was a failure on the whole, given that even if some places
were occupied, they were cleared by the police immediately," Chow said.
The democracy movement represents one of the biggest threats for China's
Communist Party leadership since Beijing's 1989 crackdown on
pro-democracy student protests in and around Tiananmen Square.
Financial Secretary John Tsang said the protests had damaged Hong Kong's
international image and hurt investor confidence, adding the city's
economic growth could be lower than the government's forecast of 2.2
percent. The territory also reported a slowdown in monthly retail sales.
[ID:nL3N0TL1R3]
Hundreds of riot police scattered the crowds in several rounds of heated
clashes overnight, forcing protesters back with pepper spray and
batons.
Scores of volunteer medics attended to numerous injured, some of whom
lay unconscious and others with blood streaming from head gashes. Police
said at least 40 arrests were made.
The unrest took place as British lawmakers said they had been told by
the Chinese Embassy they would not be allowed to enter Hong Kong as part
of an inquiry into Britain's relations with its former colony and
progress towards democracy. [ID:nL6N0TL17C]
Hong Kong returned to Chinese rule in 1997 under a "one country, two
systems" formula that gave it some autonomy from the mainland and an
undated promise of universal suffrage.
The protesters are demanding free elections for the city's next leader
in 2017 rather than the vote between screened candidates that Beijing
has said it would allow.
The Hong Kong rallies drew more than 100,000 on to the streets at their
peak. Numbers have since dwindled and public support for the movement
has waned.
(Additional reporting by Diana Chan, Kinling Lo, Clare Jim, Michelle
Chen and Ben Blanchard in BEIJING; Editing by Anne Marie Roantree and
Angus MacSwan)