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		Hong Kong leader says China 'respects and supports' withdrawal of 
		extradition bill
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		 [September 05, 2019] 
		By Farah Master 
 HONG KONG (Reuters) - Hong Kong leader 
		Carrie Lam said on Thursday that China "understands, respects and 
		supports" her government's move to formally withdraw an extradition 
		bill, part of measures she hoped would help the city "move forward" from 
		months of unrest.
 
 In a press conference, Lam was repeatedly questioned on why it took her 
		so long to withdraw the bill that would have allowed extraditions to 
		mainland China despite increasingly violent protests, but she skirted 
		the questions.
 
 "It is not exactly correct to describe this as a change of mind,” she 
		said.
 
 She added that full withdrawal of the bill was a decision made by her 
		government with Beijing's backing.
 
 "Throughout the whole process, the Central People's Government took the 
		position that they understood why we have to do it. They respect my 
		view, and they support me all the way," said Lam, dressed in a cream 
		suit and looking less tense than a televised appearance the day before.
 
		
		 
		
 She withdrew the bill, which has plunged the Chinese territory into its 
		worst political crisis in decades, on Wednesday. Hong Kong's Hang Seng 
		Index <.HSI> surged more than 4% to a one-month high ahead of the 
		announcement. On Thursday, the market was up 0.4% by midday.
 
 Lam also announced other measures including opening a platform for 
		dialogue with society to try to address other deep-rooted economic, 
		social and political problems, including housing and mobility for young 
		people, that she said were contributing to the current impasse.
 
 “We must find ways to address the discontent in society and look for 
		solutions,” she said.
 
 The withdrawal of the bill was one of the pro-democracy protesters' five 
		demands, although many demonstrators and lawmakers said the move was too 
		little, too late.
 
 The four other demands are: retraction of the word "riot" to describe 
		rallies, release of all demonstrators, an independent inquiry into 
		perceived police brutality and the right for Hong Kong people to choose 
		their own leaders.
 
 Demonstrators were still calling for all demands to be met, with many 
		placing emphasis on the independent inquiry. Lam said on Thursday that 
		the independent police complaints council was credible enough to address 
		the probe.
 
 "We have all suffered from a humanitarian disaster caused by the 
		government and police force," said Wong, one of around 100 medical 
		students protesting at Hong Kong University. Clad in gas masks, they 
		formed a human chain shouting "Five demands, indispensable." "Liberate 
		Hong Kong, revolution of our time."
 
 TEST AHEAD
 
 Further protests are planned including on Saturday another "stress test" 
		at the airport, which was targeted by protesters on Sunday leading to 
		clashes with police on approach roads and in the nearby new town of Tung 
		Chung.
 
		The official China Daily said the withdrawal of the bill was an olive 
		branch that leaves demonstrators with no excuse to continue the 
		violence.
 The announcement came after Reuters reports on Friday and Monday 
		revealed that Beijing had thwarted Lam’s earlier proposals to withdraw 
		the bill and that she had said privately that she would resign if she 
		could, according to an audio recording obtained by Reuters.
 
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			Hong Kong's Chief Executive Carrie Lam addresses a news conference 
			in Hong Kong, China September 5, 2019. REUTERS/Amr Abdallah Dalsh 
            
 
            Lam leaves for China's Guangxi province on Thursday afternoon.
 Skirmishes broke out in some districts including the working class 
			Po Lam late on Wednesday after Lam's announcement, which came after 
			a weekend of some of the most violent protests the city has seen in 
			the past three months.
 
 Police said a suspected petrol bomb was hurled at a luxury property 
			in Kowloon district in the early hours of Thursday and the suspects 
			fled on a motorbike. Local newspaper Apple Daily said the house 
			belonged to Jimmy Lai, the newspaper's owner, who was in the 
			property at the time. Pro-democracy publishing tycoon Lai is an 
			outspoken critic of Beijing.
 
 The bill was seen as the latest example of what many residents see 
			as ever-tighter control by Beijing, despite the promise of autonomy.
 
 The former British colony was handed back to China in 1997 under a 
			"one country, two systems" administration which gave the city of 
			more than 7 million people more freedoms than mainland cities, such 
			as an independent judiciary - prompting the anger over the 
			extradition bill.
 
 The protests are the biggest popular challenge to Chinese President 
			Xi Jinping's rule since he took power in 2012. China denies meddling 
			in Hong Kong's affairs and accuses Western countries of fueling the 
			unrest.
 
 Images of some of the fiercest clashes have been beamed live on 
			television screens across the world, sending jitters across the 
			international business community and leading to a large drop in 
			tourism.
 
 The Hong Kong government took out a full-page advertisement in the 
			Australian Financial Review on Thursday saying it is "determined to 
			achieve a peaceful, rational and reasonable resolution" and is 
			resolutely committed to "one country, two systems”.
 
 It ends the ad by saying: “We will no doubt bounce back. We always 
			do.”
 
            
			 
            
			 
            
 More than 1,100 people have been arrested since the violence 
			escalated in June and Hong Kong is facing its first recession in a 
			decade.
 
 China has strongly denounced the violence and warned it could use 
			force to restore order.
 
 (Reporting by Farah Master, Donny Kwok, James Pomfret, Clare Jim and 
			Felix Tam; Additional reporting by Jonathan Barrett in Sydney, 
			Writing by Anne Marie Roantree; Editing by James Pomfret and Nick 
			Macfie)
 
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