Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
International

Hong Kong protests continue, students demand chief executive's ouster

Darpan News Desk IANS, 02 Oct, 2014 11:56 AM
    Pro-democracy protests continued in Hong Kong for the fifth day Thursday with students threatening to take over government buildings unless the territory's chief executive, Leung Chung-ying, resigns by the end of the day.
     
    The "Umbrella Revolution", as the protest has come to be called, continued to attract thousands of demonstrators in four points around the city, Efe news agency reported.
     
    The protesters are insisting on universal suffrage for the next municipal elections scheduled for 2017.
     
    Shouting to the crowds through bullhorns, some students called for Leung's resignation, echoing demands by student leader Lester Shum who said the civil disobedience campaign would intensify if the chief executive did not step down before the day was over.
     
    One of his threats was to occupy government buildings but witnesses said there was only a light police presence around state property.
     
    The number of protesters occupying city streets overnight was less than on previous nights but as morning came, people began to gather in Hong Kong's financial district and the three other neighbourhoods where the demonstrations are taking place.
     
    Included in the crowds were families and tourists taking advantage of the two-day holiday marking China's national day which began Wednesday.
     
    "I've just arrived to spend the rest of the day here just as I did yesterday and previous days after getting off work," office worker Cherry Szeto told Efe.
     
    "We will be here until the end and suffer all the consequences (because) we want them to listen to us as we are demanding something reasonable and we won't leave without it," one group of students said. 
     
    According to an earlier Xinhua report, the Hong Kong government issued a statement Thursday urging an end to the protests.
     
    The statement said the protests have taken up various districts on Hong Kong island and in Kowloon for five consecutive days, causing increasingly serious impacts on people's livelihood, Hong Kong's economy and even government operations.
     
    The government and the police appealed to those who were gathering outside the Police Headquarters, Central Government Offices (CGOs) and Chief Executive's Office (CEO) not to block the access there and to disperse peacefully as soon as possible.
     
    They called on the organisers of the protests and other organisations involved to stop occupying government property immediately.
     
    Those who participated in protests have claimed publicly that they would escalate their actions to surround government premises including the Police Headquarters, CGOs and CEO.
     
    THE Protesters have been gathering around these buildings and operations have already been affected, the government said.
     
    In order to continue with its services to the general public, the CGO would need to be in operation as usual on Friday.
     
    Some 3,000 government officials will try their very best to return to work.
     
    If the siege continues and worsens, the access, normal operation and security of the government offices will be seriously affected.
     
    This will affect social order and the provision of government services to the public and society.
     
    In its statement, the government said that it hoped that the public would understand that the government has the responsibility to protect these government offices so that these can resume normal operations.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Airliner's flight ended in southern Indian Ocean: Malaysian PM

    The Malaysia Airlines plane with 239 people on board that went missing March 8 "is lost" and there are no hopes of survivors, Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak announced Monday.

    Airliner's flight ended in southern Indian Ocean: Malaysian PM

    Japan, China join forces in hunt for missing plane

    Japan, China join forces in hunt for missing plane
    Japanese search and rescue teams joined Chinese aircraft Sunday in the hunt for signs of missing Malaysian plane -- MH370 -- which has mysteriously vanished.

    Japan, China join forces in hunt for missing plane

    Missing Malaysia Flight MH370: No trace but hope sustains search

    Missing Malaysia Flight MH370:  No trace but hope sustains search
    Search for a missing Malaysian airliner yielded no result even more than a fortnight after it disappeared but Australian acting Prime Minister Warren Truss Sunday said the hunt will continue as long as there is hope. Search continued in the southern Indian Ocean after sightings of debris believed to be from the plane

    Missing Malaysia Flight MH370: No trace but hope sustains search

    Missing Malaysia Flight MH370: Day's search ends with sighting of 'objects'

    Missing Malaysia Flight MH370: Day's search ends with sighting of 'objects'
    The search for the missing Malaysian airliner ended Saturday in the southern Indian Ocean with the sighting of some objects with the naked eye even as China said that one of its satellites has spotted an object in the search area.

    Missing Malaysia Flight MH370: Day's search ends with sighting of 'objects'

    No replay of Khobragade affair for Bangladeshi diplomat

    No replay of Khobragade affair for Bangladeshi diplomat
    It looks like a replay of the Devyani Khobragade affair that strained India-US relations, but it isn't. A former domestic worker has slapped a civil suit against Bangladesh's consul general in New York and his wife accusing them of keeping him in slave-like conditions.

    No replay of Khobragade affair for Bangladeshi diplomat

    Sri Lanka army admits torture of women

    Sri Lanka army admits torture of women
    The Sri Lanka army Saturday ordered strict action against soldiers found harassing female recruits in a video circulating on the Internet.

    Sri Lanka army admits torture of women