BFF-45 Huge Hong Kong protest against China extradition plan

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BFF-45

HONGKONG-CHINA-POLITICS-PROTEST-EXTRADITION,LEAD

Huge Hong Kong protest against China extradition plan

HONG KONG, April 28, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – Tens of thousands of people hit
Hong Kong’s streets on Sunday to protest against a government plan to allow
extraditions to mainland China, the crowds swollen by anger over the recent
jailing of democracy leaders.

The extradition proposal has already sparked large protests and mounting
alarm within the city’s business and legal communities who fear it will
hammer the financial hub’s international appeal and tangle people up in
China’s opaque courts.

But Sunday’s protest was one of the biggest in the city in recent years.
The demonstration comes just days after four prominent leaders of Hong Kong’s
democracy movement were jailed for their role in organising mass pro-
democracy protests in 2014 that brought parts of the city to a standstill for
months.

Demonstrators on Sunday chanted “Step down, Carrie Lam!” — referring to
the city’s pro-Beijing leader, while many held the yellow umbrellas that
symbolised the 2014 rallies.

Fanly Leung, an accountant, told AFP it was “heartbreaking” to see the
activists jailed earlier this week.

“They are professors, highly knowledgable people contributing to
society… They could have had a comfortable life making money and not suffer
like this. It’s not right to jail these good people,” said Leung, 61.

Zoe Yuen, 20, came with her mother, who became politically active since
the 2014 Umbrella Movement protests.

“At least we have done what we should do and can tell the next
generation that although we may not get what we want, at least we have
resisted,” the university student told AFP. Some protesters dressed up as
Chinese mainland police officers guarding another demonstrator standing
behind a portable red cage.

One held up a sign that said: “President Xi Jinping, no legalised
kidnapping of Hong Kong people to China”.

Police said some 22,000 turned out, their highest estimate since the 2014
protests. Organisers gave a much higher figure of more than 130,000. Hong
Kong has a separate legal system through the “one country, two systems” deal
struck between Britain and China.

Historically the city has baulked at mainland extraditions because of
the opacity of China’s criminal justice system and its liberal use of the
death penalty. But earlier this year Hong Kong’s government announced plans
to overhaul its extradition rules, allowing the transfer of fugitives with
mainland China, Macau and Taiwan on a “case-basis” for the first time.

Chris Patten, the last British governor of Hong Kong, became the latest
figure to criticise the extradition proposal ahead of Sunday’s protest.
“Societies which believe in the rule of law do not reach agreements like this
with those who do not. These changes are an assault on Hong Kong’s values,
stability and security,” he said.

“They create fear and uncertainty for business at a time when we should
all be working to safeguard Hong Kong’s reputation as one of the world’s
greatest business and financial centres,” he added.

BSS/AFP/RY/1950 hrs