Saturday, June 15, 2019

Hong Kong Suspends Plan To Allow Extraditions To Mainland China Following Mass Protests



Daily Mail: Hong Kong's leader says the government is suspending its highly controversial plan to allow extraditions to mainland China following mass protests

* City leader Carrie Lam announced the debate on the bill would be suspended amid growing opposition to it
* The controversial bill would have seen Hong Kong residents extradited to China to stand trial for some crimes
* Hong Kong has been gripped by unprecedented protests across the city in which a million people marched
* Clashes between police and protesters on Wednesday saw 81 people hurt as demonstrations turned violent
* The international finance hub was rocked by the worst political violence since its 1997 handover to China

Hong Kong's leader announced the government will suspend its unpopular extradition bill after unprecedented mass protests this week.

City leader Carrie Lam was previously urged to halt discussions on the unpopular legislation which saw more than a million demonstrators take to the streets of the island territory.

Ms Lam said in a press conference that she took the decision in response to widespread public unhappiness over the measure, which would enable authorities to send some suspects to stand trial in mainland China.

Read more ....

WNU Editor: Beijing told Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam to stand down.

More News On Hong Kong Suspending Plan To Allow Extraditions To Mainland China

The Latest: Activists say shelving bill is not enough -- AP
Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam suspends extradition bill, but won’t apologise for rift it caused or withdraw it altogether -- SCMP
Hong Kong leader delays unpopular bill; activists want more -- AP
Hong Kong government announces suspension of divisive extradition bill -- France 24
Brusque to bruised: Hong Kong's Lam caves to pressure on extradition bill -- AP
Carrie Lam, Hong Kong’s Leader, Retreats, but Her Critics Want More -- The New York Times
Hong Kong 'suspends work' on controversial extradition bill -- DW
Hong Kong to suspend controversial extradition bill after widespread protests -- ABC News Online
Hong Kong leader suspends extradition bill amid protest pressure -- The Guardian
Hong Kong leader delays extradition bill, protesters want more -- Al Jazeera
Hong Kong's Carrie Lam defiant in face of extradition climbdown -- The Guardian
Hong Kong’s first female leader fights for political life -- AP
Hong Kong unrest has no end in sight -- Philipp Bilsky, DW

4 comments:

B.Poster said...

Time permitting I will read the article. Hong Kong is part of China is it not? China is not a democracy or a republic as the US is. As such, when those in charge tell you you to do something you do it or get replaced.

How is it that Hong Kong leaders and citizens feel bold enough to challenge China? Perhaps Donald Trump's very siccessful, to date at least, challenging of China has inspired them.

Caecus said...

Hong Kong is a former British territory that was only recently handed over to China. China has obviously been trying to increase their control bit by bit

Anonymous said...

Porn Sites in Hong Kong Shut Down to Encourage People to Protest

Anonymous said...

Hong Kong hardly inspired by Trump but rather by its own sense of a lose tie to China, a nation that implied they would be free from pressures from the mainland but is not keeping that pledge