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Hong Kong protests explained: What do demonstrators want, and what will happen?

Hong Kong was handed back to China after 155 years of British rule. The handover agreement, signed in 1984, guaranteed Hong Kong “a high degree of autonomy except in foreign and defence affairs,” a deal known as “one country, two systems”

Andrew Johnson
Tuesday 30 September 2014 03:37 EDT
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Students gather to attend a sit-in to block main roads of a popular fashion district in Hong Kong
Students gather to attend a sit-in to block main roads of a popular fashion district in Hong Kong (AP)

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What are the protests about?

The Hong Kong Special Administrative Region has been governed by a chief executive since being handed back to China by the UK in 1997. The chief executive has been selected by a 1,200-member election committee, but in 2007 China pledged elections “by universal suffrage” in 2017. In August, Beijing said that only candidates approved by a selection committee would be allowed to stand, angering pro-democracy activists.

I thought China was a one-party communist state?

Hong Kong was handed back to China after 155 years of British rule. The handover agreement, signed in 1984, guaranteed Hong Kong “a high degree of autonomy except in foreign and defence affairs,” a deal known as “one country, two systems”.

What exactly is a “high degree of autonomy”?

It has its own legal system. Freedom of assembly and freedom of speech are guaranteed.

So the protests are legal?

China says that a “high degree of autonomy” does not mean “full autonomy” and says the rallies are “illegal”.

Will Beijing step in?

Hong Kong is one of the world’s financial hubs and a bloody Tiananmen Square-style clampdown would be disastrous. Giving in to the protests will embolden democracy campaigners on the mainland, however.

Who are the activists?

Occupy Central was started by Benny Tai, a professor at the University of Hong Kong, in 2013 to pressure Beijing to make good on its “universal suffrage” pledge. In June, it ran a referendum in Hong Kong to gauge support for direct elections. Beijing was infuriated and the state-run newspaper Global Times described the poll as an “illegal farce”.

Why are they on the streets now?

Occupy Central had planned mass protests for tomorrow but a separate student movement jumped the gun, boycotted lessons and, on Friday, occupied government buildings. Occupy Central reacted by bringing its planned mass protests forward.

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