Sunday, 15-Dec-2002 12:20PM
HONG KONG (AP) -- At least 12,000 demonstrators marched on Sunday to 
    protest a planned anti-subversion law they fear will undermine Hong Kong's 
    freedoms and put the territory more firmly under the thumb of mainland 
    China. 
    
    "We don't want darkness to fall on Hong Kong," said Lee Cheuk-yan, a 
    legislator and union leader, as the protesters advanced to Hong Kong 
    government headquarters, waving signs, chanting and popping balloons. 
    
    Many sang the civil rights anthem "We Shall Overcome" in the peaceful 
    demonstration, in which the line of demonstrators stretched nearly four 
    miles. 
    
    Police said 12,000 people had turned out, while organizers put the number at 
    25,000. 
    
    The march was enormous by Hong Kong standards -- rivaled in recent years 
    only by the crowds that turn out each June 4 to commemorate China's bloody 
    crackdown on protests in Beijing's Tiananmen Square in 1989. 
    
    Ever since Hong Kong was returned from British to Chinese sovereignty in 
    July 1997, it has been required by its mini-constitution to outlaw 
    subversion, sedition, treason and other crimes against the state. 
    
    The government recently began work on the legislation. Critics say officials 
    are going too far -- apparently to please Beijing -- with a law so loosely 
    written it would let the authorities trample on people's freedoms or ban 
    groups the government doesn't like. 
    
    [...] 
    
    Many here don't believe the government. 
    
    "I don't want Hong Kong to become like China," said Philip Cheung, a 
    48-year-old civil servant who joined Sunday's demonstration. 
    
    "The rights we have are not guaranteed in the future," grumbled a 
    25-year-old bank clerk, Sam Ho. 
    
    Since Hong Kong's handover, free speech rights have been guaranteed under a 
    government arrangement dubbed "one country, two systems," and there are 
    hundreds of demonstrations every year, mostly involving dozens of people or 
    fewer. 
    
    The size of Sunday's demonstration indicated strong discontent among Hong 
    Kong's 6.8 million citizens over the bill, which the government hopes to 
    pass by July. 
    
    [...]
    The protest snarled traffic in the city center in the late afternoon, but 
    appeared to be winding down peacefully early Sunday night. 
    
    Pro-democracy politicians and human rights activists opposed to the law have 
    been joined by some in the business community who fear the exchange of some 
    financial information could theoretically be targeted and wreck Hong Kong as 
    a business center. 
    
    http://www.ptd.net/webnews/wed/dn/Ahong-kong-subversion.RnKY_CDF.html
Category: Falun Dafa in the Media
 
               
               
               
                       
                            