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		'Democracy now': Protesters stage sit-in at Hong Kong airport
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		 [August 09, 2019] 
		By Felix Tam and Lukas Job 
 HONG KONG (Reuters) - Demonstrators crowded 
		the arrivals hall at Hong Kong airport on Friday, handing out 
		anti-government leaflets and waving banners in a dozen languages in a 
		bid to raise awareness among visitors ahead of weekend rallies planned 
		across the city.
 
 About a thousand protesters, mostly young and wearing black T-shirts, 
		held a sit-in and distributed flyers headlined "Dear travelers" above 
		artwork depicting the protests since June that have plunged the 
		financial hub into its biggest crisis since returning to China from 
		British rule in 1997.
 
 "Please forgive us for the 'unexpected' Hong Kong," the English leaflets 
		read. "You've arrived in a broken, torn-apart city, not the one you have 
		once pictured. Yet for this Hong Kong, we fight".
 
 The increasingly violent protests pose one of the gravest populist 
		challenges yet to Chinese leader Xi Jinping.
 
		
		 
		What started as an angry response to a now-suspended law that would have 
		allowed criminal suspects to be extradited for trial in Chinese courts 
		has grown to include demands for greater democracy, the resignation of 
		Hong Kong chief executive Carrie Lam, and even keeping out mainland 
		tourists.
 
 The crowd at the airport filled two chambers of the arrivals hall. 
		Protesters sang "Do You Hear the People Sing?" from the musical Les 
		Miserables and chanted: "Democracy now" and "Hong Kongers, add oil!" — a 
		popular exhortation in Cantonese.
 
 The airport demonstration came as the city's powerful property 
		developers spoke out for the first time, urging calm after a dozen big 
		companies warned in recent days that the unrest had dented earnings.
 
 "The Hong Kong community has been suffering from the acts of violence 
		perpetrated by a small group of individuals lately," said a statement 
		signed by 17 developers, including Henderson Land Development <0012.HK>, 
		New World Development 0017.HK, and Sun Hung Kai Properties <0086.HK>.
 
 "Such acts have deviated from the original intent of the peaceful 
		demonstrations and are bringing distress to the business community and 
		the general public as a whole," it said.
 
 Lam scheduled a news conference at 5.15 p.m. local time (0915 GMT) with 
		Financial Secretary Paul Chan and Commerce and Economic Development 
		Secretary Edward Yau as the economic fallout from the protests widens.
 
		
		 
		'WE"RE NOT RIOTERS'
 There was no sign of a police presence at the airport by late Friday 
		afternoon.
 
 "It will be a peaceful protest as long as the police do not show up," 
		one protester, Charlotte Lam, 16, told Reuters.
 
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			Anti-extradition bill demonstrators attend a protest at the arrival 
			hall of Hong Kong Airport, China August 9, 2019. REUTERS/Thomas 
			Peter 
            
 
            "We have made stickers, banners in over 16 languages, ranging from 
			Japanese to Spanish. We want to spread our message internationally. 
			We are not rioters, we are a group of Hong Kong people fighting for 
			human rights and freedom," she said.
 Hong Kong has recalled from retirement a police commander who 
			oversaw the response to pro-democracy demonstrations in 2014 to help 
			deal with the latest protests, suggesting a lack of confidence in 
			the current leadership.
 
 Former deputy police commissioner Alan Lau Yip-shing will handle 
			large-scale public order events, including activities to mark the 
			70th anniversary of the founding of the People's Republic of China 
			on Oct. 1, the government said in a statement.
 
 The escalating violence has already prompted travel warnings from 
			countries including the United States and Australia, although the 
			airport demonstration did not draw complaints from some travelers.
 
 "I don't really know what to think about the protest down there," 
			said a woman from New Zealand who gave her name as Joyce.
 
 "Right now I just hope it won't delay my flight. But at the same 
			time, as long as you're making a point without making too much 
			trouble, it's OK I guess," she said.
 
 A Taiwanese man named Daloy, 32, welcomed the demonstrators even 
			though his flight was canceled.
 
            
			 
			"I think this is more important, because today it's Hong Kong and 
			tomorrow it will be Taiwan," he said. "We are also in a dangerous 
			situation."
 The Chinese General Chamber of Commerce said in a statement on 
			Thursday it supported the stance of Zhang Xiaoming, one of the most 
			senior Chinese officials overseeing Hong Kong affairs.
 
 Zhang said during a meeting in the southern Chinese city of Shenzhen 
			this week Hong Kong was facing its worst crisis since it returned to 
			Chinese rule in 1997. He said the central government must intervene 
			if "turmoil" occurs in Hong Kong.
 
 (Reporting By Anne Marie Roantree, Donny Kwok, Clare Jim and Farah 
			Master; Writing by Tom Westbrook, Editing by Paul Tait, Michael 
			Perry and Darren Schuettler)
 
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