Hong Kong protesters march near border to target traders from China
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[July 13, 2019]
By Greg Torode and Vimvam Tong
HONG KONG (Reuters) - Thousands of Hong
Kong people marched on Saturday to protest against mainland Chinese
traders in a town near the border, tapping into anger behind huge
demonstrations against an extradition bill to highlight another problem
they see as having been mismanaged.
The demonstration in the town of Sheung Shui, not far from the Chinese
city of Shenzhen, started peacefully but devolved into scuffles and
shouting, with police firing pepper spray at protesters who threw
umbrellas and hard hats back.
The protest is the latest in a string of demonstrations that has roiled
the former British colony for more than a month, fuelling its biggest
political crisis since China regained control in 1997.
Sometimes violent street protests have drawn in millions, with hundreds
even storming the legislature on July 1 to oppose the now-suspended
extradition bill that would have allowed criminal suspects in Hong Kong
to be sent to China to face trial.
Critics see the bill as a threat to Hong Kong's rule of law. Chief
Executive Carrie Lam this week said the bill was "dead" after having
suspended it last month, but opponents vow to settle for nothing short
of its formal withdrawal.
Protests against the bill had largely taken place in the central
business district, but demonstrators have recently begun to look
elsewhere to widen support by taking up narrower, more domestic issues.
In Sheung Shui as protesters chanted demands in Mandarin, China's
official language, for Chinese traders to go home. Many street-level
shops were shuttered during the march.
Mainland traders have long been a source of anger among those in Hong
Kong who say they have fueled inflation, driven up property prices,
dodged taxes and diluted the town's identity.
"Our lovely town has become chaos," said Ryan Lai, 50, a resident of
Sheung Shui, where so-called "parallel traders" buy bulk quantities of
duty-free goods to be carried into mainland China and sold.
"We don't want to stop travel and buying, but please, just make it
orderly and legal," he added. "The extradition bill was the tipping
point for us to come out. We want Sheung Shui back."
DEMOCRACY
Hong Kong's lack of full democracy was behind the recent unrest, said
Jimmy Sham, of the Civil Human Rights Front, which organized protests
against the extradition bill.
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Police try to disperse pro-democracy activists after a march at
Sheung Shui, a city border town in Hong Kong, China July 13, 2019.
REUTERS/Tyrone Siu
"The government, Carrie Lam, some legislators in functional
constituencies are not elected by the people, so there are many
escalating actions in different districts to reflect different
social issues," he said.
"If political problems are not solved, social well-being issues will
continue to emerge endlessly."
Similar protests have included a march last week by nearly 2,000
people in the Tuen Mun residential district to protest against what
they saw as the nuisance of brash singing and dancing to Mandarin
pop songs by middle-aged mainland women.
On Sunday, tens of thousands marched in one of Kowloon's most
popular tourist shopping areas, trying to persuade mainland Chinese
tourists to back opposition to the extradition bill.
"We want to raise awareness in Washington that the United States has
to do more now to help Hong Kong become fully democratic," said a
resident of the nearby town of Fanling, who was one of five people
in the crowd carrying U.S. flags.
"They are the most important power left that can stand up to China,"
added the 30-year-old man, who gave his name only as David,
declining to reveal his surname.
When former colonial ruler Britain returned Hong Kong to China in
1997, Chinese Communist leaders promised the city a high degree of
autonomy for 50 years.
But many say China has progressively tightened its grip, putting
Hong Kong's freedoms under threat through a range of measures such
as the extradition bill.
Anti-extradition protesters plan another demonstration on Sunday in
the town of Sha Tin, in the so-called New Territories between Hong
Kong island and the border with China.
(Reporting by Vimvam Tong and Greg Torode; Writing by John Ruwitch;
Editing by Jacqueline Wong and Clarence Fernandez)
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