• Hong Kong's independent judiciary functions under the common law framework. (wikipedia.org)
  • Can Hong Kong's Protests Survive? (foreignpolicy.com)
  • A pro-democracy protester holds a placard during a demonstration at Hong Kong's international airport on August 13. (foreignpolicy.com)
  • The tension boiled over this week as protesters swarmed Hong Kong's busy airport and shut it down, two days in a row. (cbsnews.com)
  • Under this agreement, China recognizes Hong Kong's ability to administer its own governance, legal, economic and financial systems, while both sides agree that Hong Kong is part of one, re-unified China. (cbsnews.com)
  • In slowing down Hong Kong's sole connection to the world that doesn't involve travel through mainland China, protesters hoped the international community world take notice. (cbsnews.com)
  • Hong Kong's protesters apologized, but the damage was done, and the world watched. (cbsnews.com)
  • In the past few weeks, China has moved dozens of military vehicles to Shenzhen, the closest city to Hong Kong, just across the border and 25 miles north of Hong Kong's central business district. (cbsnews.com)
  • Hong Kong's embattled leader Carrie Lam has finally fully withdrawn a controversial bill that allowed extradition to mainland China and sparked three months of dramatic protests in the financial hub. (lex18.com)
  • CORNISH: In the meantime, Hong Kong's government has actually apologized for its handling of the legislation. (npr.org)
  • CORNISH: Beyond the legislation itself, the protesters are also looking for Hong Kong's chief executive, Carrie Lam, to step down. (npr.org)
  • Wong turned up anyway that afternoon holding as sign that read "32, June 4, Tiananmen's lament" and a yellow umbrella -- the latter a symbol of Hong Kong's democracy movement. (ibtimes.com)
  • Hong Kong's democracy movement has been crushed by a broad crackdown on dissent over the last year, including the imposition of a sweeping security law that criminalises much dissent. (ibtimes.com)
  • Law encouraged overseas Hongkongers to learn from the lessons of the 2019 protest, preserve Hong Kong's history and language, and maintain the cultural identity of the Hong Kong people. (theepochtimes.com)
  • Recent protests have highlighted attacks on Hong Kong's freedom of speech as well as the growing influx and influence of mainlanders in the territory. (ticotimes.net)
  • It all came to a head earlier this month when Beijing announced that Hong Kong's next leader, known as the chief executive, would come only from a slate of candidates vetted by Chinese authorities ahead of planned elections in 2017. (ticotimes.net)
  • They are calling for the resignation of Hong Kong's current chief executive, Leung Chun-ying, considered by critics to be a Beijing proxy, and want to see free, direct elections allowed in the territory. (ticotimes.net)
  • In the Netherlands, Chinese ambassador Xu Hong defended the efforts of Hong Kong's leaders to pass a now-shelved extradition bill that would have allowed the city to send suspects to other jurisdictions, including mainland China. (politico.com)
  • Fanny Law, seen in a 2017 interview with The South China Morning Post , is a member of Hong Kong's Executive Council. (npr.org)
  • Two members of Hong Kong's Executive Council have followed the territory's chief executive in issuing a public apology for supporting an extradition bill that continues to fuel massive demonstrations despite its suspension. (npr.org)
  • The remarks by Law and Ip follow a mea culpa on Monday from Hong Kong's Chief Executive Carrie Lam, who offered her "sincere" apology for pushing the unpopular legislation. (npr.org)
  • Despite Hong Kong's special status within China, Lam is directly appointed by Beijing and the territory's Legislative Council is dominated by lawmakers who are hand-picked by the Chinese Communist Party. (npr.org)
  • Lam's latest remarks have failed to placate Hong Kong's mainly student protest leaders, who have also demanded she step down and for officials to investigate a crackdown last week on protesters that saw police in riot gear use rubber bullets, tear gas and batons against demonstrators. (npr.org)
  • Such actions in the past three months, which have fuelled unrest and dampened Hong Kong's economic prospects, have been well staged, mostly following typical patterns of anti-government movements, and some have been supported by agencies abroad, they said. (straitstimes.com)
  • They've taken an aggressive approach, calling for a national security law to stifle dissent, criticizing opposition lawmakers in Hong Kong's parliament and claiming for the first time that they have "supervisory power" over the region's legal and political systems. (latimes.com)
  • The Hong Kong Liaison Office and the Hong Kong and Macao Affairs Office, Beijing's two representatives in the city, caused an uproar when they claimed this month that a law barring central government departments from interference in Hong Kong's internal affairs does not apply to them. (latimes.com)
  • The two offices have "supervisory power," they said , over how Hong Kong implements the Basic Law, its quasi-constitution, and the "one country, two systems" agreement that Beijing will leave most of Hong Kong's internal affairs alone until 2047, when Hong Kong's semiautonomous status ends. (latimes.com)
  • It gives rise to a vague and undefined notion of power, and it completely destroys [Hong Kong's] high degree of autonomy. (latimes.com)
  • Those three ideals are pillars of Hong Kong's legal system, supposedly protected by "one country, two systems" - until now. (latimes.com)
  • Beijing and Hong Kong's relationship is laid out in the Basic Law, which allows Beijing to give final interpretations on what the law means and to appoint Hong Kong's top officials, said Johannes Chan. (latimes.com)
  • In fact, the Hong Kong's parliament, the Legislative Council, is leaned to Beijing because it is only partially democratic - about half the seats are directly elected by voters. (countercurrents.org)
  • But as the two leaders sit down for a White House working dinner Thursday night, three key figures from Hong Kong's decades-long struggle for democracy will be appearing across town at the 75th anniversary of the human rights watchdog group Freedom House. (csmonitor.com)
  • The publication also complained about the presence in the Apple Music store of a song advocating for Hong Kong's independence from China. (gulf-times.com)
  • Opposing mobs of protestors have occasionally clashed, resulting in injuries, and Hong Kong's police fired a live round of ammunition for the first time during an Aug. 26 protest. (eurasiareview.com)
  • What is Hong Kong's political context? (eurasiareview.com)
  • Riot police spilled onto Hong Kong's streets. (lbc.co.uk)
  • Clashes between police and protesters could be a catalyst for Hong Kong's stalled pro-democracy protests - but others are growing weary. (nbcnews.com)
  • HONG KONG - Battles between police and protesters for control of a key underpass could be a catalyst for Hong Kong's stalled pro-democracy protests - but opinion was divided Wednesday on whether the clashes would help or harm the so-called "Umbrella Revolution. (nbcnews.com)
  • Hong Kong's most prominent tycoon, Li Ka-shing, on Wednesday urged protesters go home, saying any breakdown of law and order would be the city's "greatest sorrow. (nbcnews.com)
  • Two schoolgirls walk past a barricade on a street outside Hong Kong's government complex on Tuesday. (wunc.org)
  • Nixon Ma runs a small electronics shop in Hong Kong's Wanchai business district, and since the protests began late last month, he says, sales are down 30 percent. (wunc.org)
  • Friday marked the sixth day of Hong Kong's protests against Beijing's interference in local politics, but the demonstrations took an unexpected turn. (theweek.com)
  • Most of the protesters have been clear about their ultimate goal: open elections for Hong Kong's next chief executive. (wgbh.org)
  • A few demonstrators even have waved Hong Kong's flag from British colonial days, which only reminds mainlanders of a time when China was weak and divided. (wgbh.org)
  • When Hong Kong's extradition accords were being finalized in 1997, Taiwan and China weren't included because the mainland has a "fundamentally different criminal justice system operating in the mainland" and because of "concerns over the mainland's track record on the protection of fundamental rights," according to an April statement by the Hong Kong Bar Association . (vox.com)
  • That reality doesn't sit well with Hong Kong's current government. (vox.com)
  • On Sunday afternoon some 400,000 protesters gathered in Hong Kong's Central Business District chanting, "Free Hong Kong. (asiapacific.ca)
  • HONG KONG - Pro-democracy lawmakers accused Hong Kong's leaders of trying to evade a public backlash over mass protests in the city after they cancelled the opening session of the de facto parliament Tuesday. (asiaone.com)
  • Protesters against the new national security law gesture with five fingers, signifying the 'Five demands - not one less' on the anniversary of Hong Kong's handover to China from Britain in Hong Kong. (aljazeera.com)
  • But critics fear it will crush the freedoms that are seen as key to Hong Kong's success as a financial centre. (aljazeera.com)
  • A couple walks past riot police as anti-national security law protesters march during the anniversary of Hong Kong's handover to China from Britain. (aljazeera.com)
  • NPR's Julie McCarthy reports on how Hong Kong's year is ending. (tpr.org)
  • To disperse a small crowd gathered on the streets of Mong Kok, in Hong Kong's Kowloon district. (tpr.org)
  • She says they helped write a new chapter in Hong Kong's history. (tpr.org)
  • He and his team of hobbyists have captured what has become Hong Kong's iconic image - the fully kitted-out protester. (tpr.org)
  • Beijing (AsiaNews) - The National People's Congress Standing Committee kicks off a weeklong meeting today to evaluate how to elect Hong Kong's chief executive. (asianews.it)
  • Hundreds of people, some wearing surgical masks and armed with crowbars and cutting tools, tore down protest barriers in the heart of Hong Kong's business district on Monday, scuffling with protesters who have occupied the streets for two weeks. (livemint.com)
  • The protesters, mostly students, are demanding full democracy and have called on the city's embattled leader, Leung Chun-ying, to step down after Beijing in August ruled out free elections for Hong Kong's next leader in 2017. (livemint.com)
  • There is a powerful anti-party mood within the demonstrations, and while Hong Kong's opposition bourgeois democratic parties continue to issue statements identifying themselves with the movement, monopolising most media interviews, these parties are almost completely absent on the ground inside the protests. (socialistworld.net)
  • This is not only a crisis for Hong Kong's ruling elite. (socialistworld.net)
  • The sharp escalation in tactics came on the anniversary of the former British colony's return to China , a city holiday, and reflected mounting frustration with Hong Kong's leader for not responding to protesters' demands after several weeks of demonstrations. (cbsnews.com)
  • @CBSNews was inside Hong Kong's Legislative Council. (cbsnews.com)
  • CBS News correspondent Ramy Inocencio reported from the melee that both the combative protesters and the much larger group marching through Hong Kong's streets - said by organizers to be about 550,000-strong - were venting anger at the city's leader, Carrie Lam, and by extension her superiors in Beijing. (cbsnews.com)
  • Protesters blocked both east-west arterial routes in northern Hong Kong Island near Admiralty. (wikipedia.org)
  • Police tactics - including the use of tear gas - and triad attacks on protesters led more citizens to join the protests and to occupy Causeway Bay and Mong Kok. (wikipedia.org)
  • Flights resumed today at Hong Kong International Airport after two days of shutdowns following clashes between protesters and police. (foreignpolicy.com)
  • Six Hong Kong protesters have been jailed for up to five years and three months for rioting near a university besieged by police during the height of the 2019 anti-government unrest. (bing.com)
  • Protesters flooded Hong Kong International Airport in the hope of getting the world's attention. (cbsnews.com)
  • An injured man who was suspected by protesters of being a Chinese spy is taken away by paramedics at Hong Kong International Airport, early on August 14, 2019. (cbsnews.com)
  • As anti-government demonstrations engulfed Hong Kong in August, Reuters broke a sensitive story: Beijing had rejected a secret proposal by city leader Carrie Lam to meet several of the protesters' demands in a bid to defuse the unrest. (cnbc.com)
  • Pro-democracy protesters march on a street as they take part in a demonstration on December 8, 2019 in Hong Kong, China. (cnbc.com)
  • Protesters in Hong Kong got a boost today when a leading pro-democracy activist was released from jail. (npr.org)
  • Joshua Wong quickly joined the protesters outside Hong Kong government offices. (npr.org)
  • ANTHONY KUHN, BYLINE: Well, last we know, a small core of young protesters continued to protest outside the government offices. (npr.org)
  • Policemen in riot gear arrive after residents and protesters gather outside a police station in Hong Kong on Wednesday. (politico.com)
  • The latest comments followed strikes and demonstrations in Hong Kong on Monday, calling for the city's legislature to scrap the extradition bill completely and launch an independent investigation into police violence against protesters. (politico.com)
  • The remarks come as officials brace for the possibility of further protests in the Asian financial hub, where anger over the bill - which would allow Hong Kong people accused of certain crimes to be tried in mainland China courts - has already sparked clashes between protesters and police. (npr.org)
  • Protesters standing next to a burning barricade they set up during a protest in Mong Kok last night. (straitstimes.com)
  • Lawmakers, diplomats and experts in China and abroad have warned about fresh signs of a so-called colour revolution in Hong Kong, as some protesters and rally organisers increasingly resort to violent actions in an attempt to shake the pillars of public services, add rifts to the community and discredit the authorities. (straitstimes.com)
  • Protesters sing after a march against an extradition bill outside the Legislative Council in Hong Kong on Sunday, June 16. (thenation.com)
  • Hong Kong citizens are delivering water and snacks to the protesters on Nathan Road, and anticipate they'll be dealing with tear gas and police in the near future. (dailydot.com)
  • Algerian protesters took to the streets as part of weekly Friday protests calling for radical change of the system. (dailymaverick.co.za)
  • Apple is the latest in a series of foreign companies and organizations to have come under fire in China for their alleged support of Hong Kong protesters. (gulf-times.com)
  • Chinese state-run newspaper People's Daily on Wednesday accused the US tech giant of helping Hong Kong protesters 'engage in more violence' through a transport app. (gulf-times.com)
  • At a cafe across the harbor at Hong Kong Baptist University, history student Mandy Wang says she admires the protesters for speaking out. (wunc.org)
  • Roving protesters, dressed for urban combat, created a series of confrontations across the territory, even closing the main tunnel linking Hong Kong Island with the rest of the territory. (survivalblog.com)
  • Pro-democracy protesters in Hong Kong have impressed people around the world with their idealism, politeness and guts. (wgbh.org)
  • And Hua sees the Hong Kong protesters as presumptuous, demanding rights no one else enjoys in China. (wgbh.org)
  • As the day progressed, protesters defied the police-sanctioned protest route and set their sights on Beijing's Central Government Liaison Office, pelting it with eggs and spraying graffiti outside the building. (asiapacific.ca)
  • Hong Kongers have written Christmas cards by the thousands to 70 or so protesters in jail and to those estranged from families who cannot condone demonstrations that defy Beijing. (tpr.org)
  • Pro-democracy protesters stand behind a barricade during clashes with anti-Occupy demonstrators, unseen, on Queensway in Hong Kong. (livemint.com)
  • Scuffles quickly broke out, the first between demonstrators and anti-protest groups, with protesters believing the attacks were coordinated and may have involved triad Asian crime gangs. (livemint.com)
  • Hong Kong - Hundreds of protesters in Hong Kong swarmed into the legislature's main building Monday night, tearing down portraits of legislative leaders and spray-painting pro-democracy slogans on the walls of the main chamber. (cbsnews.com)
  • Police fire tear gas at protesters near the government headquarters in Hong Kong on July 2, 2019, on the 22nd anniversary of the city's handover from Britain to China. (cbsnews.com)
  • Anti-extradition protesters use makeshift shields to defend themselves during a clash with police outside the Legislative Council Complex ahead of the annual flag raising ceremony of 22nd anniversary of the city's handover from Britain to China on July 1, 2019 in Hong Kong, China. (cbsnews.com)
  • Hong Kong - Months of protests by pro-democracy demonstrators in Hong Kong have led to repeated clashes with the city's security forces. (cbsnews.com)
  • Hundreds of demonstrators, including prominent lawmakers, were arrested at a peaceful sit-in in Hong Kong early Wednesday, following a huge rally calling for democracy in the Chinese territory. (cnn.com)
  • In the case of the Hong Kong protests, the demonstrators are clad in black. (straitstimes.com)
  • Democracy demonstrators have massed throughout Hong Kong for 11 consecutive weekends. (kxxv.com)
  • An account that was titled "Dream News" tweeted about the demonstrators, "We don't want you radical people in Hong Kong. (kxxv.com)
  • Following allegations of excessive use of force on demonstrators last month, Hong Kong police appear to be taking a more relaxed stance. (asiapacific.ca)
  • INSKEEP: Demonstrators protested in major malls, scuffling with police and members of the public. (tpr.org)
  • But within hours, anti-Occupy Central groups descended on the protest sites to try and disperse demonstrators, taking advantage of the earlier police action to remove barricades. (livemint.com)
  • Not since 1967, then under British colonial rule, has tear gas been used against Hong Kong demonstrators (it was used by police in 2005 at the anti-WTO protests, but these were largely 'international' in composition). (socialistworld.net)
  • The demonstrators stood on lawmakers' desks in the main legislative chamber, painted over the territory's emblem high up on a wooden wall and wrote slogans calling for a democratic election of the city's leader and denouncing now-suspended extradition legislation that sparked the protests. (cbsnews.com)
  • Government officials in Hong Kong and in Beijing denounced the occupation as "illegal" and a "violation of the rule of law", and Chinese state media and officials claimed repeatedly that the West had played an "instigating" role in the protests, and warned of "deaths and injuries and other grave consequences. (wikipedia.org)
  • It began with the Beijing-backed Hong Kong government's proposal of an extradition law that would have allowed the deportation of people from Hong Kong -- both residents and foreigners - to jurisdictions around the world with which the territory does not yet have any formal agreements. (cbsnews.com)
  • The main fear is that Beijing could use the law to apprehend people in Hong Kong and then transfer them to mainland China, where they would be subjected to the country's opaque legal system in which due process is far from a guarantee. (cbsnews.com)
  • Beijing-appointed Chief Executive of Hong Kong Carrie Lam resisted calls for the bill to be formally withdrawn. (cbsnews.com)
  • Posters of the controversial Beijing white paper, which stressed that Hong Kong does not have "full autonomy" and comes under Beijing's control, were taped to the ground along the protest route for marchers to trample underfoot. (cnn.com)
  • Under the "one country, two systems" policy, the seven million residents of Hong Kong - defined as a "Special Administrative Region" of China - are afforded greater civil liberties than those in the Mainland, under a leadership approved by Beijing. (cnn.com)
  • Since August, Refinitiv has blocked more than 200 stories about the Hong Kong protests plus numerous other Reuters articles that could cast Beijing in an unfavorable light. (cnbc.com)
  • The protests taking place in the heart of Hong Kong, Asia's most prominent financial center, present what some commentators consider the biggest challenge to Beijing since the 1989 Tiananmen protests. (ticotimes.net)
  • Hong Kong, which comprises a number of islands and a coastal strip east of southern China's Pearl River Delta, was a British colony for more than a century and a half before a negotiated deal between London and Beijing handed the territory over to China in 1997. (ticotimes.net)
  • But in recent years, Hong Kongers have grown increasingly concerned with China's long shadow and fear that Beijing will steadily undermine the SAR's unique freedoms and dismantle the "one country, two systems" model. (ticotimes.net)
  • Appearing on a local radio program, Fanny Law and Ip Kwok-him, who advise the Beijing-appointed government in Hong Kong, each offered qualified apologies for the bill. (npr.org)
  • The central government has the opportunity to influence the nomination of primary candidates and election of the Chief Executive and, hence, can keep the Hong Kong government answerable to Beijing - not to electorate - and achieve China's goals with imposing of laws restricting diverse rights of Hong Kongers in the future too. (countercurrents.org)
  • But it cannot be as easy for the Chinese central government and the pro-Beijing Hong Kong government as is said to forcefully implement the China-isation agenda especially in political terms in Hong Kong. (countercurrents.org)
  • Beijing is taking a harder line on Hong Kong. (csmonitor.com)
  • This is the first time tech companies have pointed the finger at Beijing for covert efforts to influence messaging around the Hong Kong protests. (kxxv.com)
  • Defying stern warnings from both the local government and Beijing, people in seven districts in Hong Kong-most notably teachers, airport workers, and civil servants-participated in a general strike Monday, shutting down portions of the territory. (survivalblog.com)
  • In recent years, the Hong Kong government has disqualified elected lawmakers, banned activists from running for office, prohibited a political party, jailed pro-democracy leaders, expelled a senior foreign journalist, and looked the other way when Beijing kidnapped its adversaries in Hong Kong," Ben Bland, a Hong Kong expert at the Lowy Institute in Australia, told me. (vox.com)
  • We can see that Beijing is eroding the autonomy of Hong Kong, and we want to show we don't fear central government oppression. (aljazeera.com)
  • We can see that Beijing is eroding the autonomy of Hong Kong, and we want to show we don't fear central government oppression," said Johnson Yeung, convenor of the Civil Human Rights Front, one of the organisers of the march. (aljazeera.com)
  • Beijing has allowed Hong Kong to go ahead with a popular vote in 2017, the most far-reaching experiment in democracy in China since the Communist takeover in 1949, but senior Chinese officials have ruled out allowing the public to nominate candidates. (aljazeera.com)
  • Hong Kong entered its seventh consecutive weekend of demonstrations over the government's attempt to pass a controversial extradition bill that many fear would give Beijing greater control over the Special Administrative Region. (asiapacific.ca)
  • China's parliament adopted it in response to months of pro-democracy protests last year triggered by fears that Beijing was stifling the city's freedoms, guaranteed by a "one country, two systems" formula agreed when it returned to Chinese rule. (aljazeera.com)
  • Authorities in Beijing and Hong Kong have repeatedly said the legislation is aimed at a few "troublemakers" and will not affect rights and freedoms, nor investor interests. (aljazeera.com)
  • The Occupy Central movement plans to back universal suffrage through "wave after wave" of struggle if Beijing does not meet to the needs of the people of Hong Kong. (asianews.it)
  • Tensions escalated near the main protest site after noon as nearly 200 mostly elderly, pro-Beijing supporters-wearing blue shirt and ribbons-staged a rally as police stood guard. (livemint.com)
  • With the mass protests continuing to grow and feeling enormous self-confidence since defeating Sunday's massive police attack, the movement in Hong Kong represents, in the words of Associated Press, a "major pushback" against the Beijing regime's anti-democratic agenda in Hong Kong, and in China. (socialistworld.net)
  • Through crass brutality, in its attempt to show a 'firm hand' against democracy protests, the government - under pressure from and eager to demonstrate its loyalty to Beijing - has triggered what is potentially the biggest challenge to the one-party (CCP) dictatorship in a quarter century. (socialistworld.net)
  • That may remain the view for many Hong Kongers even after the formal withdrawal of the bill. (lex18.com)
  • The immediate impetus for the demonstrations is new measures proposed by China's authorities that would limit who Hong Kongers can elect in 2017 elections. (ticotimes.net)
  • But the political earthquake shaking the former British colony is centered on a far deeper fault line: the struggle for freedom and democracy in China and the ability for Beijing's authoritarian rulers to cope with the aspirations of 7 million Hong Kongers. (ticotimes.net)
  • It became a "Special Administrative Region" (SAR) of China under a unique set of conditions, dubbed "one country, two systems": Hong Kongers were granted a range of freedoms far greater than what is allowed on the Chinese mainland. (ticotimes.net)
  • It was administered by China but with a long leash: Hong Kongers commemorate the June 4 anniversary of the Tiananmen protests every year with mass vigils and marches. (ticotimes.net)
  • Hong Kongers, many of whom are first- or second-generation descendants of Chinese who fled Communist rule, see themselves in some respects as a people apart from the rest of China. (ticotimes.net)
  • Leung has branded the protests "illegal" and urged Hong Kongers to engage in "rational" dialogue with their local government. (ticotimes.net)
  • In fact, Hong Kong protests, which started in June (2019) against the proposed Extradition Bill to allow extradition of Hong Kongers to mainland China for trial, intermittently continued for more than a year and led to brutality of police force and thousands of arrests. (countercurrents.org)
  • DeGolyer, who has studied political opinion here for years, says the vast majority of Hong Kongers support electoral democracy. (wunc.org)
  • In recent years, nouveau riche mainlanders have flooded Hong Kong, buying luxury products and homes and pushing up real estate prices, and Hong Kongers have criticized them publicly as uncouth - even referring to them as locusts . (wgbh.org)
  • Alexandra Wong, 65, was detained on Sunday on suspicion of taking part in an unlawful assembly as she walked towards Beijing's Liaison Office in Hong Kong. (ibtimes.com)
  • A vigil planned for this Friday -- the 32nd anniversary of Beijing's 1989 crackdown on democracy protests in Tiananmen Square -- has been denied permission for the second year in a row. (ibtimes.com)
  • Hong Kong has something of a democratic political system, with myriad political parties taking up seats in a legislative assembly that, while beholden to Beijing's interests, is not wholly cowed by them. (ticotimes.net)
  • Liu underlined Beijing's support for Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor and the city's police force. (politico.com)
  • Earlier this week, Hong Kong authorities freed prominent student activist Joshua Wong, who served a two-month sentence for his participation in the 2014 "Umbrella Movement" - demonstrations protesting Beijing's unwillingness to allow a freely elected Hong Kong legislature. (npr.org)
  • But Hong Kong never faded from Beijing's larger designs. (latimes.com)
  • Now that China's virus crisis has calmed - and the rest of the world is distracted by the pandemic - Beijing's newcomers in Hong Kong are trying to stop the likely return of last year's protests, which evolved from resistance to an extradition bill to a citywide anti-government movement. (latimes.com)
  • Hong Kong legal experts say Beijing's representatives are claiming an authority not found in any legal text. (latimes.com)
  • Hong Kong residents have come out in huge numbers in defiance of Beijing's rejection of true "one person, one vote" Universal Suffrage. (dailydot.com)
  • The extradition law fight, then, is the latest one in Hong Kong residents' years-long effort to stave off Beijing's creeping authority. (vox.com)
  • After taking over Hong Kong in a war in the 1800s, Britain returned it to China in 1997 with an important stipulation: The city would partly govern itself for 50 years before fully falling under Beijing's control. (vox.com)
  • Organisers of the Tuesday march expect more than half a million people to spill on to the streets, partly as a retort to a controversial "white paper" from China's cabinet in early June - an official government paper stressing Beijing's complete control over Hong Kong. (aljazeera.com)
  • HONG KONG (AP) - More than 2,000 people marched in Hong Kong on Sunday to mark 30 years since a pro-democracy protest in Beijing's Tiananmen Square ended in bloodshed. (fox17online.com)
  • A man found in possession of a Hong Kong independence flag became the first person to be arrested under Beijing's new national security law for the city, police said. (aljazeera.com)
  • It came into effect on July 1, 1997 when the U.K. handed what had been its colony of Hong Kong back to China, ending more than 150 years of British rule over the territory. (cbsnews.com)
  • Pro-democracy protests on July 1 - the anniversary of the 1997 handover of the former British colony to China - are an annual event in Hong Kong. (cnn.com)
  • Despite the fears of many doom-mongers, Hong Kong after 1997 remained much the same as Hong Kong before the handover. (ticotimes.net)
  • After ending its run as a British colony in 1997, Hong Kong was absorbed by China but with a "one country, two systems" arrangement, allowing Hong Kong to operate democratically, unlike the autocratic system under the Communist Party of China (CPC). (texasescapes.com)
  • Hong Kong was a British colony until 1997, when it was returned to China under a "one country, two systems" principle, allowing it its own legislature and economic system. (eurasiareview.com)
  • The youth-led protests against Chinese rule have plunged the international hub for trade and finance into its deepest crisis since Hong Kong was handed over from the UK to China in 1997. (lbc.co.uk)
  • This is the most serious political crisis in Hong Kong since its reversion to Chinese rule in 1997. (socialistworld.net)
  • Lam said the government's priority now was to restore law and order to Hong Kong. (lex18.com)
  • The massive Hong Kong protests against the government's proposed extradition bill have had no shortage of extraordinary moments, as more than a quarter of the city's population of 7 million have stood courageously against China's creeping authoritarianism. (thenation.com)
  • Some examples of restrictive moves can be the central government's decision to implement nominee pre-screening before allowing Chief Executive elections, declaration of patriotism as a prerequisite for holding office in Hong Kong, disqualification of six elected pro-democracy legislators after the 2016 Legislative Council elections, and passing of a controversial bill criminalizing disrespect for China's national anthem. (countercurrents.org)
  • In fact, the government's restrictive steps that led to increased protests in the past including protests in 2003, 2012, 2014 - known as the Umbrella Movement - and 2019 have already brought some successes and can motivate Hong Kongese to be more determined for the realization of their diverse rights with massive movements in the future increasing the possibility of making situations chaotic. (countercurrents.org)
  • The arrests further intensified the Hong Kong government's crackdown on dissidents after the 2019 protests. (wwlp.com)
  • Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam holds her first community dialogue since protests began. (cnn.com)
  • The protests began as a response to a controversial bill, put forth in February by the government of chief executive Carrie Lam, which would have allowed the Chinese government to extradite alleged criminals from Hong Kong to stand trial on the mainland. (eurasiareview.com)
  • We were doing it, and we are still doing it, out of our clear conscience, and our commitment to Hong Kong," Carrie Lam , the city's chief executive, told reporters on Sunday in her first comments after the protests began. (vox.com)
  • Backed by a court order, authorities in Hong Kong have begun clearing protest barricades from some of the streets in the city's main business district. (voanews.com)
  • Seeing media coverage from Hong Kong, where people first took to the streets on June 9 against an extradition bill proposed by the local government, you might think that protests are taking place 23 hours a day, breaking only for commercials. (americanorchestras.org)
  • Hundreds of thousands poured out into the streets of Hong Kong on Sunday to protest an extradition bill to China. (npr.org)
  • There was a strong police presence on Hong Kong streets on Oct. 1, the 73rd anniversary of the fall of China to the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). (theepochtimes.com)
  • They also condemned the "unlawful occupation actions" taking place in Hong Kong and suggested a foreign hand was guiding radicals mobilizing in the streets. (ticotimes.net)
  • Activists set up projectors and screens in Hong Kong streets recently and showed Winter On Fire - a documentary endorsing demonstrations in Ukraine in 2013 - saying they wanted to inspire protests in Hong Kong, BBC reported. (straitstimes.com)
  • Protests dwindled, social distancing took hold, and the city's tear-gassed streets and incendiary politics seemed to fade from the world's attention. (latimes.com)
  • An Algerian woman holds a placard as she joins a protest in the streets of Algiers, Algeria, 01 November 2019. (dailymaverick.co.za)
  • Hi Anthony - You're right, the people of Hong Kong have been taking to the streets for over six months. (texasescapes.com)
  • The New York Times has noted that these protests have eclipsed the island's next-longest set of protests in length, as the demonstrations have been going on for 80 days- longer than the 2014 pro-democracy "Umbrella Movement," which also saw hundreds of thousands of citizens take to the streets. (eurasiareview.com)
  • However, there are signs that some in the crowded and busy financial hub are growing tired of the protests, which have forced the closure of main streets. (nbcnews.com)
  • Eventually police separated the two groups, forming a human barricade between the two, and an uneasy calm returned to the streets, but Hong Kong residents expect more flare-ups. (livemint.com)
  • Mass popular resistance on the streets, by night and day, with mass gatherings of 100,000 and up to 180,000, spearheaded by the youth and a weeklong student strike, has forced the unelected Hong Kong government and thousands of heavily armed riot police to beat a retreat. (socialistworld.net)
  • Speaking after his release, Wong, 22, vowed to "join the fight with Hong Kong people against the [extradition] bill until the government backs down. (npr.org)
  • Back in April, an extradition bill was introduced that would have had certain criminals in Hong Kong transported to the mainland for their trials. (texasescapes.com)
  • The actions prompted organizers of a separate peaceful march against the extradition bill to change the endpoint of their protest from the legislature to a nearby park, after police asked them to either call it off or change the route. (cbsnews.com)
  • But Tuesday, he was out protesting in the Mong Kok business district even though it hurts his employer. (wunc.org)
  • A pro-government mob destroyed one of the pro-democracy protest sites on Friday afternoon (local time) in the Mong Kok district of the Kowloon peninsula. (theweek.com)
  • Chinese home appliances and electronics retailer Gome announced that the company's first owned store will be launched in Mong Kok, Hong Kong, this week. (chinatechnews.com)
  • Mong Kok has been one of the sites in recent weeks of protests in Hong Kong for freer elections. (chinatechnews.com)
  • On Monday, police began removing some barricades in the areas of Central and Admiralty, home to global financial institutions and government buildings, as well as the bustling district of Mong Kok, across the harbour from the glittering towers of Hong Kong Island. (livemint.com)
  • The protests have been marked by propriety and peacefulness, with activists recycling trash in the middle of demonstrations and school kids dutifully doing their homework while conducting a sit-in. (ticotimes.net)
  • During the height of the demonstrations, on June 14, a protester with a guitar took the stage at the downtown Chater Garden and sang "March for the Beloved," an iconic protest song of South Korea-first in Chinese, then in Korean. (thenation.com)
  • A covert state-backed social media campaign run from China has sought to undermine ongoing demonstrations in Hong Kong, according to information released by Twitter and Facebook on Monday. (kxxv.com)
  • I think Hong Kong people should persevere to the end, otherwise the government will never listen to us. (wunc.org)
  • I think Hong Kong people should be rational and return to reality. (wgbh.org)
  • The Hong Kong Basic Law, the constitutional document drafted by the Chinese side before the handover based on the terms enshrined in the Joint Declaration, governs its political system, and stipulates that Hong Kong shall have a high degree of autonomy in all matters except foreign relations and military defence. (wikipedia.org)
  • The British also extracted a somewhat nebulous guarantee from the Chinese that Hong Kong would be permitted a "high degree of autonomy" for 50 years after its return to China. (ticotimes.net)
  • A series of sit-in street protests, often called the Umbrella Revolution and sometimes used interchangeably with Umbrella Movement, or Occupy Movement, occurred in Hong Kong from 26 September to 15 December 2014. (wikipedia.org)
  • China's leader Xi Jinping meets with President Barack Obama in Washington this week, almost exactly a year after the pro-democracy "Umbrella Movement" protests that convulsed Hong Kong last September. (csmonitor.com)
  • The others are Joshua Wong, a teen icon of the student-led Umbrella protests, and University of Hong Kong law professor Benny Tai, architect of the Occupy Central protest that exploded last fall into what became known as the Umbrella Movement. (csmonitor.com)
  • Hong Kong police have arrested an elderly democracy activist as she made a solo demonstration over China's deadly Tiananmen crackdown in a vivid illustration of the zero protest tolerance now wielded by authorities in the financial hub. (ibtimes.com)
  • Authorities have cited the coronavirus, although Hong Kong is currently celebrating no local transmission cases of unknown origin for the last month. (ibtimes.com)
  • China's state media censored news of the protests, while authorities also blocked access to social media sites such as Instagram, on which Hong Kong protest hashtags were trending. (ticotimes.net)
  • Academic Zhang Dinghuai, a professor of Hong Kong and Macau studies at Shenzhen University, said common elements of colour revolutions include strong specific political demands, interference by external forces, attempts to motivate the public, social stand-offs and turmoil, huge pressure upon the authorities, and pursuit of power transfer through purportedly "non-violent" approaches. (straitstimes.com)
  • At the height of China's COVID-19 crisis, while central authorities fired party bosses in Wuhan and Hubei province, they also installed new representatives in Hong Kong, bringing in Communist Party hard-liners known for crackdowns on corruption and religion to oversee the former British colony. (latimes.com)
  • Student activists issued a statement calling the mob's actions "organized attacks" and threatening to cancel a planned "dialogue on political reform" with Hong Kong authorities if the government didn't immediately stop the assaults. (theweek.com)
  • The stakes have grown markedly for Hong Kong and Chinese authorities over the past few weeks. (aljazeera.com)
  • University students, increasingly joined by school students who have faced huge pressure and threats from school authorities, have extended last week's strike action, with walkouts and sit-in protests on a larger scale than before. (socialistworld.net)
  • Police have stepped up their campaign to target eight overseas-based Hong Kong activists, including former pro-democracy lawmakers Nathan Law, Ted Hui and Dennis Kwok. (wwlp.com)
  • We must pressure the central government, and tell them not to ignore the will of the Hong Kong people. (cnn.com)
  • We were not sensitive enough to feel and grasp (the) huge degree of fear and anxiety amongst people of Hong Kong vis-à-vis the mainland of China. (lex18.com)
  • If Hong Kong is going to tackle cross-border crime, then it needs to have arrangements to extradite people to stand trial where the suspected crimes took place. (npr.org)
  • While the Hong Kong government says it can guarantee people's rights in Hong Kong, people basically just have no trust whatsoever in the Chinese legal system. (npr.org)
  • As it appears, Hong Kong people have shown a tendency of protesting restrictive moves of the government. (countercurrents.org)
  • The bill magnified fears of mainland encroachment due to previous cases of people in Hong Kong being abducted and extradited to mainland China by Chinese police often for political reasons. (dailymaverick.co.za)
  • The people in Hong Kong have far more rights and freedoms than the rest of the Chinese. (texasescapes.com)
  • The bill ended up getting suspended, but most people in opposition assumed it would just come back to the floor as soon as the resistance died down, so protesting efforts continued and amplified until we got to August when one of the Hong Kong airports was shut down briefly. (texasescapes.com)
  • The people of Hong Kong are no strangers to political protest. (eurasiareview.com)
  • The Chinese government is suppressing the Church in mainland China, and so we are worried that when we have communication with the mainland Church, maybe one day the Chinese government will also arrest the Hong Kong people to suppress Hong Kong people," Edwin Chow, acting president of the Hong Kong Federation of Catholic Students, told CNA. (eurasiareview.com)
  • These people in Hong Kong are moving too far ahead," Hua continues. (wgbh.org)
  • Hong Kong people think too highly of themselves. (wgbh.org)
  • One reason many mainlanders don't sympathize with people in Hong Kong is because of bad relations between the two populations, says David Wertime, a senior editor at Foreign Policy magazine. (wgbh.org)
  • I personally think the mainland (government) should better understand why Hong Kong people protest," he says, "because there are many young people on the mainland who also feel very dissatisfied with the current reality. (wgbh.org)
  • People protest an extradition law in Hong Kong on June 10, 2019, part of a larger fight for democracy in China. (vox.com)
  • On the surface, the people of Hong Kong are fighting their political leaders over a seemingly bland set of amendments to a longstanding law. (vox.com)
  • And on Sunday, roughly 1 million people demonstrated in the semi-autonomous Chinese city-state against amendments to an extradition law that would allow a person arrested in Hong Kong to face trial elsewhere, including in mainland China. (vox.com)
  • The dedication and the commitment to fight for democracy and human rights is the only way out," said Ho, who added that he hopes more people will become aware of the situation facing Hong Kong as legislators debate the proposed amendments. (fox17online.com)
  • The territory's tenuous 'autonomy' as a special region of China is now distrusted or rejected as a fake by a majority of Hong Kong people. (socialistworld.net)
  • HONG KONG (AP) - Hong Kong police on Thursday arrested 10 people on suspicion of endangering national security through their alleged involvement with a now-defunct fund that aimed to help people arrested in 2019 pro-democracy protests, escalating a crackdown on dissidents in the semi-autonomous Chinese city. (wwlp.com)
  • The four men and six women are suspected of conspiring to collude with the 612 Humanitarian Relief Fund to receive overseas donations and provide financial support to people who fled Hong Kong or organizations that called for sanctions against the city, police said. (wwlp.com)
  • The protester introduced it as "the anthem for the May 18 Gwangju Democratization Movement" and "the song sung by a million Koreans in 2017 as they protested against [former president] Park Geun-hye. (thenation.com)
  • I received my PhD from the University of Hong Kong in 2017 (HK SAR), working as the 2017 Oak Human Rights Fellow (film and photography) at Colby College (USA), and the 2020 Post-doctoral Fellow at the University of Haifa (Israel). (lu.se)
  • Hong Kong has a different political system from mainland China. (wikipedia.org)
  • What we've got today: Growing violence in Hong Kong feeds Chinese propaganda, Chinese Communist Party officials meet for a seaside retreat, and U.S. President Donald Trump calls a Christmas truce in the U.S.-China trade war . (foreignpolicy.com)
  • Is Hong Kong part of China? (cbsnews.com)
  • Yes, Hong Kong is part of China , governed under the so-called "one-country, two systems" principle. (cbsnews.com)
  • A map showing southern China, including the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region. (cbsnews.com)
  • As a result, Refinitiv's customers in China have been denied access to coverage of one of the biggest news events of the year, including two Reuters reports on downgrades of Hong Kong by credit-rating agencies. (cnbc.com)
  • Reuters: EXCLUSIVE: Financial info provider @Refinitiv has blocked more than 200 @Reuters stories about the Hong Kong protests in mainland China. (cnbc.com)
  • Lam may be hoping that the move will put a lid on the protests ahead of October 1, when China will celebrate National Day and mark 70 years of the People's Republic. (lex18.com)
  • The nature of the protest movement has transformed over the last 13 weeks," said Adam Ni, a China researcher at Macquarie University in Sydney. (lex18.com)
  • Let's say the police arrested you today because you were in the protest, and they sent you to China. (npr.org)
  • Termed as the National Day of the People's Republic of China by the CCP, communist flags flew all over subdued Hong Kong while across the world in Manchester, U.K., a large crowd of Hongkongers in exile gathered to protest the loss of freedom in the city of their birth. (theepochtimes.com)
  • Hong Kong activist Finn addressed the rally via video and called for an end to the sister cities program with China in order to resist the CCP's influence. (theepochtimes.com)
  • What is the relationship between Hong Kong and China? (ticotimes.net)
  • China is stepping up its attempts to rally global support for its handling of protests in Hong Kong, with its ambassadors in Europe calling for condemnation of the violence in the city. (politico.com)
  • Several British politicians have spoken out about the protests, including former foreign secretary Jeremy Hunt who warned China in June of consequences if the right to protest was neglected in Hong Kong. (politico.com)
  • China has used various tactics to try to drum up international support for its position on the protests. (politico.com)
  • This new law drove further protests in Hong Kong and, of course, strongly raised an old question anew: Will Hong Kong be completely controlled by China similar to mainland Chinese cities in the future? (countercurrents.org)
  • As is rightly criticized, the Chinese government is gradually weakening rule of law, civil rights and freedom of media and eliminating every trace of liberal democratic values, which Hong Kong - reputed as Asia's World City, one of the most advanced capitalist economies around the world and a multi-party political system - was enjoying before its being handed over to China by Britain. (countercurrents.org)
  • Given that China is a big power - economically and militarily - and has loyal government in Hong Kong, it may be easier, at least somewhat, to implement its agenda, significant for making it more capable of realizing its ultimate goal of exerting greater influence in Asia and beyond. (countercurrents.org)
  • For starters, to understand any of it you need to know about the semi-autonomous relationship Hong Kong has with mainland China. (texasescapes.com)
  • Life for Catholics in Hong Kong vs in mainland China is very different. (eurasiareview.com)
  • The strike followed weeks of sometimes violent protests in the territory, a semi-autonomous region of the People's Republic of China. (survivalblog.com)
  • In Wanchai's Golden Bauhinia Square, a magnet for tourists from other parts of China, kids spray-painted a statue with provocative statements such as "The Heavens will destroy the Communist Party" and "Liberate Hong Kong. (survivalblog.com)
  • To understand how many Chinese have viewed the protests, it's worth considering how different Hong Kong, a wealthy, cosmopolitan city, is from mainland China. (wgbh.org)
  • He focuses on China and has been studying the mainland social-media reaction to the protests. (wgbh.org)
  • Hong Kong is bracing for its largest protest in more than a decade after nearly 800,000 voted for full democracy in an unofficial referendum, a move likely to stoke anti-China sentiment in the former British colony. (aljazeera.com)
  • Hong Kong returned to China with wide-ranging autonomy under the formula of "one country, two systems", allowing such protests to take place. (aljazeera.com)
  • He is chairman of the Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements of China. (fox17online.com)
  • Police detained a protester during a march marking the anniversary of the Hong Kong handover from Britain to China. (aljazeera.com)
  • Until now, only half of the seats in parliament are elected by a popular vote, whilst the chief executive is picked by a 1,200-member committee representing sectors of society and business, co-opted by the government of Hong Kong and China. (asianews.it)
  • China rules Hong Kong under a "one country, two systems" formula that accords the former British colony a degree of autonomy and freedoms not enjoyed in mainland China, with universal suffrage set as an eventual goal. (livemint.com)
  • Rather than appealing to the US administration or ex-colonial masters Britain for support, as some pan democratic organisations are doing (for US and British capitalism, financial deals with China always trump concerns over democracy and human rights), the protest movement must seek allies among grassroots workers and youth in China and worldwide. (socialistworld.net)
  • The 2019 protests were sparked by a since-withdrawn bill that would have allowed criminal suspects to be extradited to mainland China. (wwlp.com)
  • Hong Kong has been wracked by weeks of protests over a government attempt to change extradition laws to allow suspects to be sent to China to face trial. (cbsnews.com)
  • Many of these features align with what has happened in Hong Kong this year as well as in the Occupy Central movement in 2014, Professor Zhang said. (straitstimes.com)
  • The Hong Kong protests of 2019, also known as Anti-Extradition Law Amendment Bill Movement, drew huge attention from many across the world. (countercurrents.org)
  • The Occupy Central civil disobedience movement kicked off days early to capitalize on momentum begun by Hong Kong students over the weekend during sit-ins and an attempted retaking of a formerly public civic square that was blocked off by the Hong Kong government back in July. (dailydot.com)
  • The incident could galvanize support for the pro-democracy movement in the city where the protests over Chinese restrictions on how it chooses its next leader had dwindled from about 100,000 at their peak to just a few hundred. (nbcnews.com)
  • Twitter said it identified a network of more than 900 accounts that "were deliberately and specifically attempting to sow political discord in Hong Kong, including undermining the legitimacy and political positions of the protest movement on the ground. (kxxv.com)
  • And so has the solidarity that has marked this protest movement. (tpr.org)
  • Yet this movement is almost entirely without organisations, programme or leadership, replicating a pattern we have seen in similar mass protest movements around the world. (socialistworld.net)
  • Clearly, as long as the CCP rules there will be no possibility of democratic elections in Hong Kong - the main focus of this movement - and only the toppling of this regime will open that road. (socialistworld.net)
  • If we don't say anything, then Hong Kong will turn into a Chinese city," said a 50-year-old protester, who like many on the march, was not comfortable giving her full name. (cnn.com)
  • He said that on the CCP's "National Day" on Oct. 1, he can only remember the martyrdom of the protester Marco Leung and the incident where the Hong Kong police opened fire on a protester. (theepochtimes.com)
  • Hong Kong Secretary for Security Lai Tung-kwok said police would investigate the beating of the protester in the video, who pro-democracy lawmaker Alan Leong identified as Ken Tsang Kin-chiu, a fellow member of the Civic Party. (nbcnews.com)
  • The semi-autonomous territory of Hong Kong, however, holds yearly vigils and other gatherings to remember the deceased and pay tribute to the spirit of the protests. (fox17online.com)
  • Protests started immediately since this kind of law would undermine the separate governing and legal systems, plus it seemed to many like another way for the Chinese government to crackdown on dissent. (texasescapes.com)
  • We were able to show that peaceful, non-violent protest is possible," he told CNN. (cnn.com)
  • it was a peaceful and legitimate protest under international law," said Mabel Au, director of Amnesty International Hong Kong. (cnn.com)
  • And last week, after a meeting with Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi in Thailand, Hunt's successor, British Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab, said "peaceful protest is a basic right and should be respected. (politico.com)
  • The peaceful protest has been met by Hong Kong police using tear gas and pepper spray to "lawfully" disperse the crowds. (dailydot.com)
  • Spurred by widespread peaceful and unrelenting protests in Algiers, then president Abdelaziz Bouteflika was forced to resign immediately in April, followed by a purge of his elitist cronies. (dailymaverick.co.za)
  • The legacy of the Algerian civil war, commonly referred to as the "black decade" from December 1991 to February 2002, which recorded over 150,000 deaths, seems to have helped in the peaceful nature of the protests and the state's response. (dailymaverick.co.za)
  • Though the protests have been largely peaceful, participants on both sides have periodically resorted to violence. (eurasiareview.com)
  • That peaceful protest - one of the largest in the city's history, featuring about one in every seven residents - turned violent the next day when a few hundred citizens clashed with police . (vox.com)
  • While earlier protests were relatively peaceful, they have become increasingly provocative with events this past weekend the most violent so far. (asiapacific.ca)
  • Wong -- known locally as "Grandma Wong" -- was a regular fixture of the huge democracy protests that swept Hong Kong in 2019. (ibtimes.com)
  • In the middle of the 2019 protests Wong disappeared for more than a year. (ibtimes.com)
  • MCCARTHY: Winnie Wong also says Hong Kong cannot do so alone. (tpr.org)
  • Police keep watch in Hong Kong on Oct. 1, 2022, during commemorations for China's National Day. (theepochtimes.com)
  • At an address on Tuesday at the London embassy to mark the 70th anniversary of the founding of the People's Republic, Liu Xiaoming, China's ambassador to Britain, said ending violence in Hong Kong was a "top priority" for the city. (politico.com)
  • But the promulgation of the 2020 national security law is obviously a big jump in China's efforts to achieve its goal of making Hong Kong a fully controlled city - at least after 2047 when the historic handover agreement will end - through coercion or trickery. (countercurrents.org)
  • The vote was organised by Occupy Central, behind the financial district shut-down plan, and comes at a time when many Hong Kong residents fear civil liberties are being stripped away. (aljazeera.com)
  • HONG KONG (AP) - Amid the detritus from protests that turned violent in Hong Kong this week was umbrellas. (bing.com)
  • Marchers gathered in Victoria Park before setting out along the protest route through the downtown business district, amid sweltering temperatures and sporadic heavy rain showers. (cnn.com)
  • The political situation, and the implications for what could happen next, are complex, and Catholics and Protestant Christians both young and old are making their voices heard amid the protests. (eurasiareview.com)
  • This weekend, a young medic was hit in the face by a projectile fired at close range by the Hong Kong police and may lose sight in one eye. (foreignpolicy.com)
  • The Hong Kong police held a press conference Monday evening. (npr.org)
  • Police have refused to grant permission for a protest on May 1, citing coronavirus concerns. (latimes.com)
  • This mobile app claims to provide transportation information for the convenience of the public, but is actually used to identify the whereabouts of the police, allowing the rioters in Hong Kong to go on violent acts,' the paper said. (gulf-times.com)
  • Hong Kong police fire tear gas at protestors. (eurasiareview.com)
  • The protests have since morphed to focus on actions by police that many have denounced as police brutality, including allegations of sexual assault by police officers. (eurasiareview.com)
  • The apostolic administrator of Hong Kong, Cardinal John Tong, has asked the government to eliminate the extradition law completely, and for an independent inquiry into the excessive use of force by the Hong Kong police. (eurasiareview.com)
  • Hong Kong Protests: Will 'Dirty' Police Attack Galvanize Students? (nbcnews.com)
  • He added: "The public now has a very bad image of the Hong Kong police because you can see from the news that the police didn't do anything to win the public over. (nbcnews.com)
  • The No. 1 demand has been an independent inquiry into alleged police abuse during the protests. (tpr.org)
  • On Sunday, September 28, the police launched wave after wave of tear gas attacks - 87 times according to their own statement - in an attempt to clear the protests around the government headquarters in Admiralty. (socialistworld.net)
  • The decision was widely seen to be highly restrictive, and tantamount to the Chinese Communist Party (CCP)'s pre-screening of the candidates for the Chief Executive of Hong Kong. (wikipedia.org)
  • This week: Growing violence in Hong Kong, a Chinese Communist party retreat, and a Christmas truce in the trade war. (foreignpolicy.com)
  • Hong Kong will just become another Chinese city ruled by the Communist Party," Jimmy Lai, a local pro-democracy leader and media mogul, wrote for Nikkei Asian Review last week. (vox.com)
  • BONNIE LOCK: (Through interpreter) The protests have affected how the world view the Chinese Communist Party because in the past 20 years, the world only sees the economic benefits that it brings, but now they realize it could affect the world order and that it's a threat to freedom and democracies around the world. (tpr.org)
  • Mass street protests began on June 9 with a one-million person march. (cbsnews.com)
  • Under the new law, street protests and advocacy of outspoken local voices are almost impossible in Hong Kong. (countercurrents.org)
  • Last week, hundreds of thousands in Hong Kong held a candlelight vigil for the victims of the Tiananmen Square massacre 30 years ago. (vox.com)
  • The airport said it had an injunction limiting where the anti-government protests could take place. (foreignpolicy.com)
  • The protests ended without any political concessions from the government, but instead triggered rhetoric from Chief Executive of Hong Kong CY Leung and mainland officials about rule of law and patriotism, and an assault on academic freedoms and civil liberties of activists. (wikipedia.org)
  • Mr Yang Guang, spokesman for the State Council's Hong Kong and Macau Affairs Office, told reporters last Tuesday there have been "clear features of a colour revolution" among the radical activists in Hong Kong, and their goal is to paralyse the territory's government, seize the power for governing the Special Administrative Region and make "one country, two systems" an empty concept. (straitstimes.com)
  • After a standoff, the Hong Kong government agreed Tuesday to meet with student leaders later this week. (wunc.org)
  • Protestors vehemently opposed the bill, sparking the first major protest on June 6. (eurasiareview.com)
  • The U.K. did not have to give back the separate island of Hong Kong, home to today's iconic skyline and central business district, which was actually ceded in perpetuity to Britain. (cbsnews.com)
  • However, Britain didn't believe it could realistically administer the small island of Hong Kong, as the New Territories make up about 90% of what is known today collectively as the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region. (cbsnews.com)
  • He also praised members of the Chinese community in Britain who petitioned British politicians and raised public awareness "to deplore violence and oppose foreign interference" in Hong Kong. (politico.com)
  • And in Spain, Chinese ambassador Lyu Fan took aim at Britain, saying "Hong Kong is no longer a colony under the orders of British politicians. (politico.com)
  • The guarantees over the territory's autonomy and the individual rights and freedoms are enshrined in the Hong Kong Basic Law, which outlines the system of governance of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, but which is subject to the interpretation of the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress (NPCSC). (wikipedia.org)
  • The situation has escalated into what many Hong Kong citizens perceive to be an existential threat to their autonomy guaranteed under a mini-constitution known as the Basic Law until 2047. (dailymaverick.co.za)
  • At the end of the rally, student activist groups held illegal sit-ins at two locations, at Chater Road in the heart of the business district, and outside the office of Hong Kong Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying. (cnn.com)
  • Although the issues vary from region to region, it is clear that citizens are demanding to be heard and they are using unorthodox ways to organise and protest. (dailymaverick.co.za)
  • The territory has seen numerous protests in recent years, most significantly in 2014, wherein citizens have demanded an expansion of democracy. (eurasiareview.com)
  • They accuse the eight of violating the national security law and have offered rewards of 1 million Hong Kong dollars ($127,600) for information leading to each of their arrests. (wwlp.com)
  • Johnson Yeung Ching-yin, convener of the Civil Human Rights Front, the organizers of the rally, said it was a pivotal moment for political reform in Hong Kong. (cnn.com)
  • Hong Kong activist Finn Law addressed the rally via video. (theepochtimes.com)
  • Student leaders and government officials agreed Tuesday to hold talks on ending the protests. (wunc.org)
  • Those opposing the bill have vowed to escalate their protests, which organizers say have numbered nearly two million unless the government meets their demands by Thursday. (npr.org)
  • Zeng Yuxuan, 23, a law student at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, was arrested when she tried to pick up a package containing the banner in early June. (bing.com)
  • Dr. Lit, a traditional Chinese medicine doctor from Hong Kong, had a Ukrainian flag on his shoulders. (theepochtimes.com)
  • Hong Kong is what's known as a special administrative region, meaning it has its own government but remains under Chinese control. (eurasiareview.com)
  • Catholic leaders in Hong Kong have expressed concern that the Communist Chinese government would use the now-suspended extradition law to further tighten its grip on free speech and free exercise of religion in Hong Kong. (eurasiareview.com)
  • Being here reminds me that the Chinese government is so inhumane and, recently, they are tightening the rule of law in Hong Kong," Tiffany, a 23-year-old university student who attended the candlelight vigil last week, told the Asia Times on June 5. (vox.com)
  • Wang Junzhou, general manager of Gome, did not make any statement about the protest's impact on the store opening and he told local Chinese media that the positioning of the Gome Hong Kong store is as an international store instead of store of domestic products. (chinatechnews.com)
  • Wang also pointed out that as for Chinese brands, Gome will focus on those that have already entered the Hong Kong market such as Haier and Midea. (chinatechnews.com)
  • The novel coronavirus ground the world to a halt, and restive Hong Kong was no exception. (latimes.com)
  • Why did the current protests start? (cbsnews.com)
  • The current protests are the longest and largest in the territory's history, and are not currently showing signs of abating. (eurasiareview.com)
  • Students led a strike against the NPCSC's decision beginning on 22 September 2014, and the Hong Kong Federation of Students and Scholarism started protesting outside the government headquarters on 26 September 2014. (wikipedia.org)
  • Two groups, Scholarism and the Hong Kong Federation of Students, say they will stage a sit-in after the July 1 march lasting until the following morning. (aljazeera.com)
  • Some sporadic barricades have been thrown across major roads, and on Sunday night a 'general strike' call was issued by the Hong Kong Confederation of Trade Unions (HKCTU). (socialistworld.net)
  • The leader of Hong Kong, the Chief Executive, is currently elected by a 1200-member Election Committee, though Article 45 of the Basic Law states that "the ultimate aim is the selection of the Chief Executive by universal suffrage upon nomination by a broadly representative nominating committee in accordance with democratic procedures. (wikipedia.org)
  • For a chief executive to have caused this huge havoc to Hong Kong is unforgivable," Lam added. (lex18.com)
  • Hong Kong residents have been calling for quite some time for full democracy and universal suffrage in parliamentary and chief executive elections. (asianews.it)
  • Protests against the face mask ban raise their hands to symbolise their five demands. (lbc.co.uk)
  • All train services in Hong Kong have been suspended as the country braces itself for more violent protests. (lbc.co.uk)
  • Statisticians from the University of Hong Kong estimated the turnout as between 154,000 and 172,000. (cnn.com)
  • asked Johannes Chan, former dean of the faculty of law at the University of Hong Kong. (latimes.com)
  • Several renowned Hongkongers in exile were invited to speak, among them former Yuen Long District Councilor To-Ka Lun, political activist Finn Lau, veteran commentator Ching Cheong, and the convenor of Hong Kong Independent Alliance Wayne Chan. (theepochtimes.com)