HONG KONG, July 1: Defiant protesters targeted China’s President Hu Jintao in Hong Kong today as the former British colony swore in a new leader and marked the 15th anniversary of its return to Chinese rule.
“I vow to defend the Hong Kong… Basic Law,” new Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying, a millionaire property consultant seen as close to China’s communist rulers, said as he read out the oath before shaking hands with Hu.
The Basic Law is Hong Kong’s mini-constitution, which guarantees the former British colony civil liberties unheard of on the mainland under the “one country, two systems” model set up when it returned to Chinese rule in 1997.
But Hu’s visit and the inauguration came as discontent towards Beijing surges to a new post-handover high in Hong Kong, and security has been stifling for the events, with hundreds of police and giant barricades deployed.
Even so as the president began his own speech to around 2,300 guests in a harbourfront convention hall, a protester repeatedly shouted “End one-party rule”.
The man also referred to the crushing of democracy protests on Tianamen Square in Beijing on June 4, 1989, and was rapidly surrounded and taken away as the audience drowned him out with extended applause for Hu’s opening remarks.
The Chinese president said that Beijing’s support for “one country, two systems” and the right of the people of Hong Kong to rule the territory was “unwavering”.
“We will follow the Basic Law… To continue to advance democratic development in Hong Kong,” said Hu, who will step down as part of a once-a-decade leadership transition in Beijing starting this year.
However, Hong Kong does not yet enjoy universal suffrage to elect its leader, and Leung was elected as chief executive in March by a special committee stacked with pro-Beijing business elites.
Protesters have been demanding greater democracy and railing against Beijing’s meddling in local affairs.
Ahead of the inauguration, a group of demonstrators outside a nearby building burned Leung’s portrait, shouting: “Battle the Communist Party! We will battle to the end!”
In another protest, marchers held aloft a mock red coffin bearing the words in Chinese: “The Liaison Office (Beijing’s representative) governs Hong Kong.”
Hu had earlier been expected to attend a flag-raising ceremony on Hong Kong’s iconic waterfront. (AGENCIES)