Hong Kong student leaders and government officials talked but agreed on little yesterday as the city’s Beijing-backed leader reaffirmed his unwillingness to compromise on the key demand of activists camped in the streets now for a fourth week.
Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying told reporters that the government won’t let the public nominate candidates to run in inaugural direct elections to succeed him in 2017, as demanded by thousands of protesters occupying main streets across the city. But he added that there’s room to discuss how to form the key 1,200-member nominating committee.
Leung said such changes could be covered in a second round of consultations over the next several months.
“How we should elect the 1,200 so that the nominating committee will be broadly representative — there’s room for discussion there,” Leung said. “There’s room to make the nominating committee more democratic, and this is one of the things we very much want to talk to not just the students but the community at large about.”
Soon after Leung spoke to The Associated Press and three other news agencies, top officials from his government began much-awaited, televised talks with student leaders.
In opening remarks, student leader Alex Chow said that an August decision by China’s legislature ruling out so-called civil nomination and requiring the nominating committee has “emasculated” Hong Kong.
Chow and four other student leaders, wearing black T-shirts that said “Freedom Now!,” faced off against five senior government officials in dark suits across a U-shaped table.
“We don’t want anointment,” said Chow, secretary-general of the Hong Kong Federation of Students, one of three groups leading the protests.
Chow also took aim at Leung’s comments Monday that Hong Kong shouldn’t have broader democracy because the poor would have too much say in setting policies in the Asian financial hub.
Leung’s remarks to The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal and the Financial Times underlined how protesters’ concerns have been fueled by discontent over soaring inequality in the former British colony.
“An unequal nominating committee is no good for the wealth gap in Hong Kong,” Chow said. “Should it continue to serve business conglomerates, won’t it continue to deprive the political rights of the 1 million people living in poverty?”
The officials stuck to the government line that Hong Kong’s mini-constitution cannot be amended to accommodate protesters’ demands, while also saying that many others don’t share their views.
“We hope you would understand that there are a lot of people who are not in Mong Kok, who are not in Admiralty. There are many people at home who aren’t insisting on civil nomination,” said Justice Secretary Rimsky Yuen.
Chief Secretary Carrie Lam, the government’s No. 2 official, repeatedly chided the students for being “idealistic” rather than “pragmatic.”
Both sides showed little willingness to compromise. Lam said she hoped for further talks though the students weren’t sure whether they would continue.
Thousands of people intently watched the meeting on giant screens in the main protest area in Admiralty, on a highway next to city government headquarters. They cheered student leaders who criticized the government intransigence’s and booed Lam when she commended police for exercising restraint.
Police armed with pepper spray and batons have clashed violently in recent days with protesters armed with umbrellas and goggles in the blue-collar district of Mong Kok over control of the streets. Nearly 300 people have been injured since the protest began.
The protesters heaped on more boos when the screens went black after the talks ended, reflecting what several said was their overall disappointment with the meeting.
“The government didn’t do anything,” said Alex Chan, a 40-year-old technology consultant. “But it’s only the start, the first time. Everybody has to find a way to end this situation.”
Leung said one obstacle to resolving the conflict is a lack of consensus among the protesters as to what would end the street occupation.
He said the government could consider changes such as replacing corporate votes with individual ballots in the nominating committee, as suggested by former Chief Secretary Anson Chan. Kelvin Chan and Jack Chang, Hong Kong AP
HONG KONG | Students, officials talk but don’t agree
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