Thousands in Hong Kong protested yesterday against Hong Kong Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying (梁振英) as pressure mounts against the Beijing-backed politician who has been embroiled in an illegal construction scandal since taking office in July.
Thronging the streets on New Year’s Day, crowds of people, some dressed in black with colorful banners and wearing long-nosed Pinocchio masks, chanted “Leung Chun-ying step down” in a rally that snaked several kilometers toward government headquarters.
While Hong Kong is a largely stable financial hub with a strong rule of law, the political heat has risen over Leung’s failure to adequately explain seemingly innocuous building work on his home, eroding public trust and raising suspicions he may have covered up the scandal last year as he campaigned for the leadership.
Photo: AFP
“CY Leung does not have the ability and credibility to handle even his own personal scandals. How can he lead Hong Kong in a proper way with political and economic development?” protest organizer Jackie Hung (孔令瑜) said.
Leung last month said he had been negligent and apologized for how he handled questions over his illegally built basement. Such work is common to maximize living space in space-starved Hong Kong, but similar minor violations have ensnared several prominent officials over the past year.
By late afternoon, organizers put the turnout at the protest at about 60,000, though police said 17,000 had showed up.
The demonstration was largely peaceful, though police maintained a heavy presence after two journalists were roughed up by pro-government supporters at a rival rally on Sunday.
In a statement, Leung said the government would “humbly” listen to the public’s views. Several thousands of Leung’s supporters also staged a pro-government new year rally.
China’s senior leaders, including Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao (溫家寶), have warned of Hong Kong’s “deep-rooted conflicts” in the past, though Beijing has so far publicly endorsed Leung’s administration when he made a duty visit last month.
In a stormy half year since taking office, Leung has also had to contend with a raft of policy challenges, including an unpopular pro-Beijing education curriculum that was later shelved, high housing prices and a massive influx of mainland Chinese visitors.
Leung, sometimes dubbed the “wolf” for his perceived abrasive style and close ties to the Chinese Communist Party, has a chance to assuage some public discontent in a policy address in the middle of the month, though populist measures aimed at cooling a red-hot property sector and poverty alleviation have so far had only a limited impact on the public mood.
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