Protesters disrupt Hong Kong election meeting

Demonstrators have stormed a meeting in Hong Kong to protest a new rule stipulating political candidates must declare Hong Kong an inalienable part of China.

People protest for Hong Kong independence in this file photo from July.

People protest for Hong Kong independence in this file photo from July. Source: AAP

Dozens of masked demonstrators have tried to force their way into an electoral meeting in Hong Kong to protest a new bar on anyone running for the legislature who refuses to declare the territory an "inalienable" part of China.

They were among hundreds of protesters gathered outside the meeting, a briefing for prospective parliamentarians, shouting for Hong Kong's independence.

Inside the venue, some candidates who had been approved to run for election protested the decision to disqualify others.

"Some participants shouted and stormed the stage, causing chaos and seriously disrupting the order of the event," the government said in a statement late on Tuesday.

Members of the League of Social Democrats and People Power tried several times to charge the stage and take the microphone before being pushed back by security, forcing the meeting to be suspended at least three times.

Politicians from other pro-democracy parties chanted: "No more political elimination!" and "Defend a fair election!"

The Electoral Affairs Commission said last month that potential candidates for the September Legislative Council election must sign an additional "confirmation form" declaring Hong Kong an inalienable part of China and acknowledging that advocating independence could disqualify them from the election.

Hong Kong has greater freedoms than mainland China and separate laws that were guaranteed for 50 years as part of a "one country, two systems" framework negotiated with the British when they handed back their former colony.

But there has been political unrest in recent years centring on Beijing's refusal to allow fully democratic elections and its perceived meddling in the special administrative region.


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2 min read
Published 3 August 2016 1:24pm
Updated 3 August 2016 2:37pm
Source: AAP


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