By SURYA DEVA, City University Hong Kong
After days on the streets, thousands of Hong Kong residents are still occupying several major streets of their city. Already nicknamed as the “umbrella movement” because of protesters’ use of umbrellas to shield against the police’s pepper spray, this is the fruit of indifference from both Beijing and the local government to the genuine universal suffrage demands made by a significant section of Hong Kong society.
The immediate trigger for this massive movement was a decision by the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress (NPCSC), delivered on August 31, that set a spark to years of frustration among pro-democrats.
The NPCSC stipulated that while next the chief executive of Hong Kong could be elected in 2017 by “one person, one vote”, the nominating committee set up under Article 45 of Hong Kong’s Basic Law must first nominate two or three candidates who “love China” and that each candidate must have the endorsement of more than half the nominating committee’s members.
The NPCSC also determined that the committee would meet the legal requirement of being “broadly representative” if it is modelled on the existing Election Committee – which comprises 1,200 members, a majority of whom are pro-Beijing.
Instagram has now been shut down in Hong Kong but these powerful images had already been shared…
Top Comments
Am in Hong Kong (Kowloon side) and have found things to be pretty much 'as normal'. One blocked street today, but very peaceful. Instagram still working ... Not blocked as stated above. Much of the ex-pat community in support of the protesters.
I think it is blocked in mainland China but not in Hong Kong - so it doesn't spread.
Stay safe Alison. I hope it's not going to be another Tiananmen.