Hong Kong’s leader vows to stay in office

Leung says pro-democracy movement has ‘lost control’

A man and girls read messages left by pro-democracy protesters outside the government headquarters in Hong Kong. Hong Kong’s embattled leader Leung Chun-ying vowed today to stay in office. Photograph: Bobby Yip/Reuters
A man and girls read messages left by pro-democracy protesters outside the government headquarters in Hong Kong. Hong Kong’s embattled leader Leung Chun-ying vowed today to stay in office. Photograph: Bobby Yip/Reuters

Hong Kong's embattled leader Leung Chun-ying has vowed to stay in office, warning students demanding his resignation that their pro-democracy movement is out of control.

Mr Leung said today the blockade of key parts of the Asian financial hub - now entering its third week - could not continue indefinitely.

Speaking in an interview with the local TVB television station, Mr Leung said his government would continue to try to talk with student leaders but did not rule out the use of “minimum force” to clear the area.

The last few weeks had “proved that a mass movement is something easy to start, but difficult to stop,” he said.

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“And no-one can direct the direction and pace of this movement. It is now a movement that has lost control.”

Mr Leung also warned that there was "zero chance" that China's leaders in Beijing would change an August decision limiting democracy in Hong Kong.

The former British colony was promised that its freedoms would be protected under a "one country/two systems" formula, when Britain handed its old colony back to China 17 years ago.

Beijing has said that only candidates screened by a nomination committee will be able to contest a full city-wide vote to choose the next chief executive in 2017.

The official People’s Daily in Beijing described the so-called Occupy Central movement as “unrest” in a front-page editorial published yesterday - language some analysts said reflected the growing unease among China’s leaders.

Mr Leung’s comments came as the protest centre outside government head offices in Admiralty took on the feel of a festival campsite in a canyon of skyscrapers.

Some 200 tents now line Gloucester and Harcourt roads on what had been one of Hong Kong’s busiest thoroughfares leading to the glittering Central financial district.

Hundreds of protesters, young and old, slept overnight in what some protesters described as the most peaceful, relaxed night yet. Some strummed guitars between speeches, others played cards or read.

Some students studied in a makeshift classroom, complete with desks and power sockets set up on the highway.

Walls and overpasses have been festooned with thousands of notes, signs and banners, some depicting Mr Leung as a mafia chief and others warning "Taiwan beware" of accepting a one country/two systems formula in any reunification deal with Beijing.

Not everyone was happy with the carnival atmosphere. Construction workers and a drivers’ union challenged the students to end their protests, and warning them to dismantle the barricades as it was effecting their work.

“Democracy is very important but people’s livelihoods are are also very important,” said Chan Tak-keung, one of a group of angry taxi drivers who shouted at the students in Admiralty.

Despite the festival atmosphere in Admiralty, the situation remains tense on the streets of the gritty district of Mong Kok, with scuffles reported between police and protesters overnight.

Though talks with student leaders were called off last week, Mr Leung said today that the government had to take account of the students’ demands, while adding that both their demands and actions had to be lawful.

“If we need to clear the area, I believe that police will use their professional training...using minimal force. We don’t want to see our people and our students get hurt,” he told TVB.

The two students’ groups and the democratic activist movement behind the protests formally rejected Leung’s statements, demanding “full accountability” for the use of tear gas and for failing to fully reflect to Beijing Hong Kong’s desire for democracy, and described him as “beset by scandal”.

The three groups said in a statement: “We cannot allow one person, Leung Chun-ying, to destroy the Hong Kong core values we so cherish!”

Reuters