Angry emojis flood Hong Kong leader's Facebook Live chat By Xinqi SU Hong Kong (AFP) Oct 17, 2019 Hong Kong's embattled leader took to Facebook Live late Thursday in a bid to reach out to citizens after months of political unrest -- and the emoji count was far from kind. Carrie Lam -- the city's unelected chief executive -- currently boasts record low approval ratings as the financial hub convulses with more than four months of huge, increasingly violent pro-democracy protests. Backed by Beijing, her administration has refused to grant any major concessions to protesters, who are demanding greater democratic freedoms and police accountability. Angry faces significantly outnumbered hearts and likes left by viewers on the hour-long Facebook Live broadcast, while critics also used the comments section to pile on. By the end of the session, in which a host chose from a series of pre-selected questions and some live ones, the angry face count stood at more than 9,400 compared to 2,100 likes and 632 hearts. Lam defended her record and stuck to her oft-repeated talking points that she cannot give in to violent protesters and won't be resigning. "We need more dialogue and communication, more mutual understanding and tolerance," she said. She added that she was taken aback by the huge rallies. "Nobody could predict that we would be facing such a huge storm," she said. Millions have taken to the streets this summer, initially against a now-dropped bid by its leaders to allow extraditions to the authoritarian Chinese mainland. But after Beijing and Lam took a hard line, the movement snowballed into a broader push for democracy and police accountability. Lam has previously stated a willingness to hold dialogue sessions with the public, but they have also got off to a rocky and limited start. In late September she sat down with some 150 randomly selected members of the public for a live forum where questions critical of her government dominated. Protesters also surrounded the venue and she was unable to exit for hours until the crowds dispersed.
Hong Kongers need more support, dissidents tell German book fair "We need to work together with European countries, we must do everything we can to preserve freedom of expression and democracy in Hong Kong," Liao told a crowd of some 200 people, many of whom held up black umbrellas. "Europe isn't clear about what's going on. That's because of what the communist government is doing," said the Berlin-based writer, who was jailed for a poem about the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests and whose works are banned in China. Umbrellas are the symbol of the anti-government protest movement that has rocked the semi-autonomous territory in recent months, posing the biggest challenge to China's rule since the city's handover from Britain in 1997. The demonstrations were initially sparked by opposition to a now-scrapped proposal to allow extraditions to mainland China. But they have since morphed into a larger movement for democracy and police accountability, and have turned increasingly violent. China has accused "external forces" of fuelling unrest in the Asian financial hub and has seized on supportive comments by Western politicians to back its claims. - 'Free Gui Minhai' - Former bookseller Lam, who fled to Taiwan earlier this year for fear of possible extradition to China, also took to the stage in the German city of Frankfurt to plead for stronger action. He welcomed a draft US law that would link Hong Kong's special trading status to annual reviews of its respect for civil rights and the rule of law. "I hope the EU, the UK government and others can bring in similar laws," Lam said, calling for sanctions on government officials and police officers who commit rights violations. "By placing restrictions on them, by not allowing them to travel into the country or preventing them from investing. That would help Hong Kongers a lot." Lam was one of five Hong Kong publishers selling gossip-filled tomes on China's leaders who vanished at the end of 2015, before resurfacing in Chinese custody. He and three others were released in 2016, but Gui Minhai, a Chinese-born Swedish citizen, remains in detention in unclear circumstances. Organisers of the Frankfurt vigil called for his release and read out a letter by his daughter Angela who has led efforts to keep her father's case in the media. "It's been four very long years and I'm exhausted," she wrote from Sweden, accusing the Chinese government of a harassment campaign against her. "More often than not quitting seems very easy," she said, thanking supporters for "always showing up for my father". "Here's to him being with us next year." The Frankfurt book fair, the world's largest, has staged a series of events since 2016 under the banner #FreeGuiMinhai, while Germany itself has emerged as a country of refuge for a number of Chinese and Hong Kong dissidents. German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas last month drew Beijing's ire when he met prominent Hong Kong activist Joshua Wong. On her last trip to Beijing, Chancellor Angela Merkel stressed that the rights and freedoms of the people of Hong Kong "must be guaranteed".
Lam abandons policy speech after lawmakers heckle; US House pass 'Democracy Act' Hong Kong (AFP) Oct 16, 2019 Hong Kong's embattled leader abandoned a State of the Union-style speech on Wednesday after she was heckled by opposition lawmakers during chaotic scenes inside the city's legislature. The speech by chief executive Carrie Lam was billed as an attempt to win hearts and minds after four months of seething pro-democracy protests. But it instead laid bare the intense polarisation coursing through the semi-autonomous financial hub after weeks of huge and increasingly violent protests. Lam tried t ... read more
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