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posted by Fnord666 on Monday June 17 2019, @09:18AM   Printer-friendly
from the get-temporary-acquiesence dept.

Hong Kong has a population of nearly 7.5 million people. Last Sunday (June 7) organizers reported that one million of them peacefully protested against a controversial extradition bill. As the protests continued and the government resisted, the protests changed. For now, the government has indefinitely suspended deliberations:

Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam acquiesced, at least in part, to massive protests in the city this week as she announced Saturday the controversial extradition bill will be suspended indefinitely.

"The original urgency to pass the bill in this legislative year is perhaps no longer there," Lam said at a press conference. "After repeated internal deliberations over the last two days, I now announce that the government has decided to suspend the legislative amendment exercise."

[...] Thousands of mostly-young protesters shut down Hong Kong's Legislative Council complex and paralyzed parts of the semi-autonomous Chinese territory on Wednesday. Riot police fired multiple rounds of tear gas and rubber bullets to disperse the throngs of demonstrators, who hurled bottles, umbrellas and other objects at them.

At least 72 people were injured, including 22 police officers. Eleven people were arrested for disorderly conduct, unlawful assembly, assaulting officers and riot-related activities stemming from Wednesday's protests, authorities said.

Heavy rain prevented most organizers from carrying out fresh demonstrations the following day. Still, the president of the Legislative Council cancelled all planned sessions again Thursday and Friday, pushing debate on the bill to next week.

Under the extradition law amendment, any country -- including China -- could request the extradition of an individual to their home country from Hong Kong for trial. Many who oppose the proposed legislation fear that China could use it to arrest political dissidents.

Does any other country have such an open extradition policy?

[*] One million people represents over 13% of the population of Hong Kong. That is quite the protest! To get a protest of the same scale in the United States, you would need 18.5 million people: the combined populations of the four most-populated cities: New York, NY (8.4M), Los Angeles, CA(3.9M), Chicago, IL(2.7M), and Houston, TX(2.3M) plus #10 San Jose, CA (1M).


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  • (Score: 2) by Phoenix666 on Monday June 17 2019, @11:01AM (2 children)

    by Phoenix666 (552) on Monday June 17 2019, @11:01AM (#856575) Journal

    In the united states the rule of thumb is to increase the official figure by an order of magnitude. that would mean every person in hong kong hit the streets and the whole city stopped.

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  • (Score: 2) by MostCynical on Monday June 17 2019, @12:45PM

    by MostCynical (2589) on Monday June 17 2019, @12:45PM (#856602) Journal

    BBC [bbc.co.uk] reports 'unverified' 2 million
    Al Jazeera [aljazeera.com] also report 2 million, quoting 'organisers'

    How many really? How many not on the streets were doing anything useful?

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  • (Score: 2) by takyon on Monday June 17 2019, @12:54PM

    by takyon (881) <takyonNO@SPAMsoylentnews.org> on Monday June 17 2019, @12:54PM (#856605) Journal

    IMO, official figures tend to downplay protest numbers, not increase them. That was definitely the case with these Hong Kong protests.

    https://www.reuters.com/article/us-hongkong-extradition/hong-kong-vows-to-press-ahead-with-extradition-bill-despite-huge-protest-idUSKCN1TB08W [reuters.com] (June 9)

    Organizers put the size of Sunday’s crowd at more than a million, outstripping a demonstration in 2003 when 500,000 took to the streets to challenge government plans for tighter national security laws.

    Police put the figure at 240,000 at the march’s peak.

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