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		Hong Kong leader signals end to 
		extradition bill but refuses to quit 
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		 [June 18, 2019] 
		By Clare Jim and Noah Sin 
 HONG KONG (Reuters) - Hong Kong leader 
		Carrie Lam on Tuesday signaled the end of a controversial extradition 
		bill that she promoted and then postponed after some of the most violent 
		protests since the former British colony returned to Chinese rule in 
		1997.
 
 In a closely watched press conference, Lam apologized for the turmoil 
		but refused to say the bill would be "withdrawn", only that it wouldn't 
		be re-introduced during her time in office if public fears persist.
 
 This was the strongest indicator yet that the government was effectively 
		shelving legislation that would allow people to be extradited to 
		mainland China to face trial, even if it fell short of protester demands 
		for the government to scrap the bill altogether.
 
 "Because this bill over the past few months has caused so much anxiety, 
		and worries and differences in opinion, I will not, this is an 
		undertaking, I will not proceed again with this legislative exercise if 
		these fears and anxieties cannot be adequately addressed," Lam told 
		reporters.
 
 Lam, appearing both contrite and defiant, used much of the same language 
		as a previous press conference on Saturday when she announced a 
		postponement of the bill. A day later, about two million people spilled 
		on to the streets, many demanding that she step down.
 
		
		 
		
 Lam, asked repeatedly whether she would quit, refused to do so, saying 
		there remained important work ahead in the next three years, which would 
		bring her to the end of her current five-year term of office.
 
 "After this incident, I think work in the next three years will be very 
		difficult ... but myself and my team will work harder to rebuild public 
		confidence.”
 
 Lam apologized for plunging the city into major upheaval, saying she had 
		heard the people "loud and clear" and would try to rebuild trust.
 
 But some protest organizers and opposition Democrats said Lam remained 
		tone-deaf to public demands, namely that she state categorically a 
		retraction of the bill, step down immediately and pledge not to 
		prosecute any protesters on rioting charges.
 
 "Carrie Lam is continuing to lie," said Jimmy Sham, the convener of the 
		Civil Human Rights Front. "We hope the people of Hong Kong can unite 
		with us ... to keep working hard to withdraw the evil law," he told 
		reporters.
 
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			Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam attends a news conference in 
			Hong Kong, China, June 18, 2019. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu 
            
 
            Alvin Yeung, a democratic lawmaker, said Lam had failed again to 
			lower the political temperature in the city of seven million.
 "Hong Kong will not accept this," he said.
 
 Lam's climb-down, with the approval of China's Communist Party 
			leaders, was the biggest policy reversal since 1997 and presented a 
			new challenge for Chinese President Xi Jinping who has ruled with an 
			iron fist since taking power in 2012.
 
 Since the proposed amendments to the Fugitives Offenders' Ordinance 
			were first put to the legislature in February, Lam has repeatedly 
			rebuffed concerns voiced in many quarters, including business 
			groups, lawyers, judges, and foreign governments against the bill.
 
 Critics say the bill would undermine Hong Kong's independent 
			judiciary and rule of law, guaranteed by the "one country, two 
			systems" formula under which Hong Kong returned to China, by 
			extending China's reach into the city and allowing individuals to be 
			arbitrarily sent back to China where they couldn't be guaranteed a 
			fair trial.
 
 Chinese courts are ultimately controlled by the Communist Party.
 
 Lam issued an apology on Sunday night through a written government 
			statement that many people said lacked sincerity. It failed to 
			pacify many marchers who said they no longer trusted her and doubted 
			her ability to govern.
 
 Lam, a career civil-servant known as "the fighter" for her 
			straight-shooting and tough leadership style, took office two years 
			ago pledging to heal a divided society. Some observers say she is 
			unlikely to step down immediately but any longer-term political 
			ambitions she may have harbored are now all but dead.
 
             
			(Reporting by Clare Jim, Noah Sin, Twinnie Siu, Anne Marie Roantree 
			and Hong Kong newsroom; Writing by James Pomfret; Editing by Nick 
			Macfie)
 
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