From the DW:
“Hong Kong opposition primary
draws nearly 600,000 in 'protest' vote”
Primaries for Hong Kong's
pro-democracy camp drew higher numbers of voters than expected, despite fear of
reprisal under a new national security law. The vote was seen as a test for
resistance to the law out of Beijing. Over half a million voters in Hong Kong
cast their ballots in primaries held by the city's pro-democracy opposition
parties, organizers said on Sunday after polls closed. The turnout was higher
than organizers were expecting, with over 610,000 people casting their ballots
digitally and in person. People stood in long lines outside of 250 polling
stations across Hong Kong for the two-day election. "A high turnout will
send a very strong signal to the international community, that we Hong Kongers
never give up," Sunny Cheung, a 24-year-old supporter of the pro-democracy
opposition, told Reuters. The vote took place less than two weeks after China
instituted a new security law that many fear will erode democracy in the
semi-autonomous territory. "The primary election is our first time to let
Beijing know Hong Kongers never bow down to China," said pro-democracy
activist Joshua Wong on Saturday before voting began. "We urge the world
to put Hong Kong under the global spotlight." The elections, organized by
the Group Power for Democracy, seek to secure a majority of more than 35 seats
— more than half of the total number —
for pro-democracy candidates in Hong Kong's Legislative Council election
in September. This would give democracy candidates greater power to veto
pro-establishment legislation. Last November, three million people voted in
Hong Kong's District Council elections, handing a landslide victory to the
pro-democracy camp, who won 17 of the 18 District Councils. Support stemmed
from opposition to a proposed extradition law that would have allowed people
arrested in Hong Kong to be sent to mainland China for trial, a bill that has
since been withdrawn. The bill sparked months of violent anti-government
protests, which have waned since security forces arrested over 300 people on
July 1, the day after the new national security law went into effect. The
district-wide elections, which run through Sunday, were also thrown into
question on Friday when Hong Kong police raided the office of a co-organizer
responsible for election polling. Many regard the opposition's primary as a
litmus test of greater resistance to the security law. Instituted by China last
month, the law targets secession, subversion, terrorism and collusion with foreign
forces. Hong Kongers face uncertainty over what constitutes a violation. In a
government broadcast on Thursday, Secretary for Mainland Constitutional Affairs
Erick Tsang said organizers and participants in the primary elections could be
in violation of the new law. He said that polls might be manipulated to
interfere with elections in September.
^ This is a real sign that the
ordinary Hong Konger is against the Direct Rule that the Communist Government
in Beijing has forced on Hong Kong – breaking the 1997 Handover Agreement. ^
https://www.dw.com/en/hong-kong-opposition-primary-draws-nearly-600000-in-protest-vote/a-54135805
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