Hong Kong protesters march to US Consulate to call for help from Trump
Protests
calling on US President Donald Trump to intervene in the ongoing Hong
Kong political standoff escalated rapidly Sunday, with marchers
setting fire to a barricade outside a subway station entrance in the
city's business district.
Earlier
in the day, tens of thousands of protesters waving US flags marched
on Hong Kong's US Consulate to call for help from the Trump
administration in ending a
three-month confrontationwith
the government.
The
march began in the Chater Garden public park in Central before
heading to the consulate as part of the 14th straight weekend of
public demonstrations in the Asian financial hub.
In
a letter which protesters planned to presented to consulate
officials, the group calls for the passing of the proposed "Hong
Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act 2019" by the US Congress.
One
banner carried at the march read "President Trump, please
liberate Hong Kong" in English. Some marchers sang the US
national anthem as they moved towards the consulate.
"We
share the same US values of liberty and democracy," 30-year-old
banker David Wong said. "USA is a country of democracy. Donald
Trump is elected by his people. We want this."
The
protests began peacefully but rapidly deteriorated into violence and
vandalism over the afternoon, after police appeared to arrest a
number of people in the busy Central subway station.
Protesters
erected a barricade at one of the subway exits before being setting
it on fire. Other exits had their glass windows smashed or defaced
with graffiti.
The
Sunday clashes indicate that an attempt by the Hong Kong government
to defuse the crisis by withdrawing
a controversial China extradition bill on
Wednesday, one of the official five demands of the protest
movement, had
failed.
Leading
activists said the move was too little too late and already on Sunday
groups of protesters have been heard chanting, "Five demands,
not one less."
The
march is unlikely to end allegations by the Chinese government and
state-run media that the United States has been interfering
in the Hong Kong protests.
Speaking
last week, Hong Kong and Macau Affairs Office spokesman Yang Guang
accused US politicians of "shooting their mouths off" on
the demonstrations.
US
President Donald Trump has shown little inclination to get involved
in the Hong Kong protests since they began in June.
In
August he said he hoped the demonstrations would eventually work out
"for everybody, including China" and that no one gets hurt.
But
some US politicians have been pushing for greater US action to help
the protesters, with some even pushing for an official re-evaluation
of Hong Kong's "most-favored-nation" trade
status with the United States.
That
special status gives countries certain
trade advantages, including
lower tariffs on imported goods, according to the US government.
A
bipartisan group of US senators introduced the "Hong
Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act" in
June, which requires an annual check that Hong Kong is autonomous
enough "to justify special treatment."
It's
this act which some protesters are calling on the US Congress to pass
to put additional pressure on the Hong Kong government and Beijing to
accede to their demands.
The
interest US politicians have shown in Hong Kong, including Vice
President Mike Pence and the Democrat Party leadership, have led to
accusations from China that Washington is behind the three-month long
demonstrations.
"It
is an open secret in Hong Kong that the forces protesting the
extradition bill have been sponsored by the US," Chinese
state-run tabloid Global Times said in
an editorial in July. Multiple
high-ranking Chinese Foreign Ministry officials have repeated
the claim without
any proof.
The
US State Department responded that Chinese claims of their
involvement are "ridiculous."
Comments
Post a Comment