Demonstrators in Hong Kong yesterday gathered outside the office of Chief Executive Carrie Lam (林鄭月娥), demanding that she step down for the crisis over a highly unpopular extradition bill that has tested the durability of China’s promises to respect the former British colony’s quasi-autonomy.
The mostly young protesters blocked a street near the territory’s waterfront as they stood outside Lam’s office chanting calls for her to cancel the proposed legislation.
As night fell, protest leaders debated their next steps. Some wanted to set a deadline for a meeting with Lam. Others decided to head home.
Photo: Reuters
Nearly 2 million Hong Kong residents, young and old, on Sunday joined a march that lasted late into the night to express their frustrations with Lam and the extradition bill, backed by Beijing. Many stayed on afterward.
Protesters blocked some downtown roads well into yesterday morning, but gradually yielded to police requests to reopen roads, moving to areas near government headquarters.
The protest revived after Joshua Wong (黃之鋒), a prominent activist leader, rallied the crowd later in the day after his release from prison.
Photo: Reuters
The activists have rejected apologies from Lam for her handling of the legislation, which would allow suspects to be sent to nations that Hong Kong does not currently have an extradition treaty with, including China, for trial.
She announced on Saturday that work on the bill would be suspended after large protests last week.
“We are very angry that Carrie Lam has not responded to the demands of all the protesters, but now is the time to talk about strategy, and talk about strategy is about how to make the whole struggle into a long-term struggle and not a day struggle, so if Carrie Lam does not respond to the demands by the protesters, people will come back and the struggle will continue,” former legislator Lee Cheuk-yan (李卓人) said yesterday.
Photo: Reuters
Wong, who was imprisoned for his role in the 2014 “Umbrella movement,” was released from prison after serving half of a two-month sentence on a contempt charge, and soon joined the fray.
“After the end of the Umbrella movement we claimed we would be back. Finally five years later we did it,” Wong said.
“It’s lucky that Beijing and Carrie Lam transformed a whole generation of youngsters from normal citizens to dissidents. That’s the price that Beijing must pay,” Wong said.
Photo: Bloomberg
However, a senior official in the territory’s government who is close to Lam yesterday told Reuters that Beijing would not let her step down even if she wanted to, adding that the proposed extradition law has effectively been withdrawn.
Despite the anger against Lam, she was unlikely to go, said the official, who declined to be identified given the sensitivity of the matter.
“It’s not going to happen,” said the official, who has been involved in meetings on the political crisis.
Photo: AFP
“She’s appointed by the central government, so for her to step down requires a very high level of considered discussion and deliberation at the mainland level,” the official said.
Lam was voted in by an electoral college of Beijing-approved delegates, after Beijing rejected demands for universal suffrage in the territory.
Her resignation now, even if Beijing thought it was time, and the search for a new leader, would likely rekindle the debate about democracy in the territory.
“It would create more sorts of problems than it solves, at all sorts of levels,” the source said of the prospect of Lam quitting.
The official said the decision to postpone the bill had been made with Beijing’s consent, to the relief of many in the territory’s administration.
Lam’s office issued a statement on Sunday evening, apologizing and acknowledging that “deficiencies in the government’s work had led to substantial controversies and disputes in society.”
The official said the proposed law was effectively dead in the water.
“Suspending it actually means withdrawal ... it would be absolute political suicide to bring it back again,” the official said.
However, the protests had probably damaged Lam politically in the eyes of Beijing and it was “doubtful” that she would seek a second term, the official added.
Hong Kong Executive Council member Regina Ip (葉劉淑儀), an adviser to Lam, told Reuters that she did not think Lam would resign.
Veteran opposition Democratic Party lawmaker James To (涂謹申) said Lam had to go.
“She has missed golden opportunities to show repentance and recover and now has lost all credibility to govern,” he said.
Additional reporting by Reuters
RETHINK? The defense ministry and Navy Command Headquarters could take over the indigenous submarine project and change its production timeline, a source said Admiral Huang Shu-kuang’s (黃曙光) resignation as head of the Indigenous Submarine Program and as a member of the National Security Council could affect the production of submarines, a source said yesterday. Huang in a statement last night said he had decided to resign due to national security concerns while expressing the hope that it would put a stop to political wrangling that only undermines the advancement of the nation’s defense capabilities. Taiwan People’s Party Legislator Vivian Huang (黃珊珊) yesterday said that the admiral, her older brother, felt it was time for him to step down and that he had completed what he
Taiwan has experienced its most significant improvement in the QS World University Rankings by Subject, data provided on Sunday by international higher education analyst Quacquarelli Symonds (QS) showed. Compared with last year’s edition of the rankings, which measure academic excellence and influence, Taiwanese universities made great improvements in the H Index metric, which evaluates research productivity and its impact, with a notable 30 percent increase overall, QS said. Taiwanese universities also made notable progress in the Citations per Paper metric, which measures the impact of research, achieving a 13 percent increase. Taiwanese universities gained 10 percent in Academic Reputation, but declined 18 percent
CHINA REACTS: The patrol and reconnaissance plane ‘transited the Taiwan Strait in international airspace,’ the 7th Fleet said, while Taipei said it saw nothing unusual The US 7th Fleet yesterday said that a US Navy P-8A Poseidon flew through the Taiwan Strait, a day after US and Chinese defense heads held their first talks since November 2022 in an effort to reduce regional tensions. The patrol and reconnaissance plane “transited the Taiwan Strait in international airspace,” the 7th Fleet said in a news release. “By operating within the Taiwan Strait in accordance with international law, the United States upholds the navigational rights and freedoms of all nations.” In a separate statement, the Ministry of National Defense said that it monitored nearby waters and airspace as the aircraft
UNDER DISCUSSION: The combatant command would integrate fast attack boat and anti-ship missile groups to defend waters closest to the coastline, a source said The military could establish a new combatant command as early as 2026, which would be tasked with defending Taiwan’s territorial waters 24 nautical miles (44.4km) from the nation’s coastline, a source familiar with the matter said yesterday. The new command, which would fall under the Naval Command Headquarters, would be led by a vice admiral and integrate existing fast attack boat and anti-ship missile groups, along with the Naval Maritime Surveillance and Reconnaissance Command, said the source, who asked to remain anonymous. It could be launched by 2026, but details are being discussed and no final timetable has been announced, the source