Hong
Kong protesters told to clear streets or risk arrest
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[November 11, 2014]
HONG KONG (Reuters) - Hong Kong's
acting chief executive on Tuesday called on pro-democracy protesters to
clear sites they have occupied for more than six weeks and warned
holdouts they could face arrest, a move that could swell protest
numbers.
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Hundreds of student-led demonstrators are camped out in two key
districts of the Chinese-controlled city where they have pitched
tents and set up supply stations on roads bisecting some of the
world's most expensive real estate.
Hong Kong media reported that authorities could start removing
protesters as early as Wednesday.
"To those who are unlawfully occupying the roads, we call for you to
leave the areas quickly and peacefully," said Carrie Lam, acting
leader while chief executive Leung Chun-ying attends the Asia
Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit in Beijing.
The protesters are demanding fully democratic elections for the
former British colony's next chief executive in 2017 instead of the
vote between pre-screened candidates that Beijing has allowed.
Hong Kong media had speculated that China was waiting to clear the
protesters until after the APEC summit ends on Tuesday. U.S.
President Barack Obama was due to meet Chinese President Xi Jinping
on Wednesday before flying out.
Lam spoke a day after a court ruled that police could arrest
protesters who defy authorities trying to clear camp sites. Lam did
not provide a timeframe.
"As the place where the whole movement began, Admiralty is likely to
be the last area to be cleared because people will come out again
real quick if the police touch the nerve of the movement," Matthew
Ng, 21, said from his tent in the district next to government
buildings.
Many protesters said they would simply regroup if police moved in.
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At the height of the protests, police fired tear gas and pepper
spray to disperse thousands, many of whom used umbrellas, gloves and
masks to protect themselves.
Almost nine out of 10 protesters said they were ready to stay on the
streets for more than a year, according to an informal Reuters
survey last month.
The protests, the most tenacious since Hong Kong returned to Chinese
rule in 1997, have defied riot police and attacks from hostile mobs,
as well as intense government and public pressure.
China has ruled Hong Kong since 1997 through a "one country, two
systems" formula which allows wide-ranging autonomy and freedoms not
enjoyed on the mainland and specifies universal suffrage as an
eventual goal.
(Reporting By Diana Chan and Donny Kwok; Editing by Anne Marie
Roantree and Nick Macfie)
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