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September 11, 2014

Beijing tells Hong Kong pro-democracy lawmakers they are lucky to be alive


Lily Kuo 

33 minutes ago

At least they're alive. Reuters/Tyrone Siu

Last month, before Beijing laid out terms for how Hong Kong residents should elect their leaders starting in 2017, China’s most senior official in Hong Kong held a closed-door meeting with local pro-democracy lawmakers. Asked whether Beijing would allow a democrat to run for the city’s top position, Zhang Xiaoming, head of China’s Liaison Office in Hong Kong, replied bluntly: “The fact that you are allowed to stay alive, already shows the country’s inclusiveness.”

The comment should erase any lingering hopes that Beijing might still soften its stance toward Hong Kong, a partially autonomous city where activists and lawmakers have been calling for full universal suffrage. Beijing’s proposal last month falls well short of that: Candidates for the city’s top post will need the approval of at least half of a nominating committee that will likely stacked with pro-Beijing members.

Democratic lawmakers in Hong Kong that have vowed to shoot down the proposal, which needs the approval of the local legislature, have been hoping that Beijing might negotiate—especially as students and activists threaten to paralyze the city and stage a mass boycott of classes. That hope is quickly fading. Today, lawmakers from Hong Kong’s Democratic Party said they were done engaging in “deceptive” negotiations with Beijing.

Beijing’s unwillingness to compromise with the more moderate lawmakers, who also prize stability, may be a sign that Hong Kong is losing any leverage it once had over China, as a center for international trade and finance and a base for doing business in the mainland. Hong Kong’s economy, once 12% the size of China’s in the 1980s, isnow only 3% of the mainland’s.

http://qz.com/263627/beijing-tells-hong-kong-pro-democracy-lawmakers-they-are-lucky-to-be-alive/