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NewsJune 26, 2019

HONG KONG -- China promised for 50 years after Britain gave up control of its last colony, this shimmering financial enclave would get to keep freedoms absent in the communist-ruled mainland. Twenty-two years on, those are rights many here believe Hong Kong cannot live without...

Associated Press

HONG KONG -- China promised for 50 years after Britain gave up control of its last colony, this shimmering financial enclave would get to keep freedoms absent in the communist-ruled mainland. Twenty-two years on, those are rights many here believe Hong Kong cannot live without.

The hundreds of thousands who marched in a June 16 protest over a now-shelved extradition bill, and those still demonstrating, are signaling alarm Hong Kong may become just another Chinese city as those protections unravel and Beijing's influence expands in the territory.

Activists are planning more protests for today, hoping to win attention and support from world leaders gathering in Osaka, Japan, for the Group of 20 summit later this week.

All of those involved -- the territory's top official, Chief Executive Carrie Lam, the police, lawmakers, the protesters and the rest of Hong Kong -- are caught up in tensions stemming from the "one country, two systems" colonial legacy bequeathing a Western-style civic society under a political system controlled by Beijing.

The protests erupted after Beijing-backed Lam tried to push through legislation to have allowed some criminal suspects to be sent to face trial in Communist Party-dominated courts in mainland China. Many in Hong Kong viewed the bill as another step toward curbing protections they expect from their legal system.

While they come from all walks of life, the protesters share a determination to preserve those freedoms, said Samson Yuen, a professor at Hong Kong's Lingnan University.

"This protest has drawn everybody in town together," he said. "They really value the freedom to speak up and protest."

Jerome A. Cohen, a leading expert on Chinese law and government, said the extradition bill would have deprived local authorities of the right to prevent forcible transfers by China of suspects, including visitors, "for detention, trial and punishment that violate international standards of justice."

The bill also would have enabled China to require Hong Kong authorities to freeze and confiscate assets of alleged suspects, Cohen wrote in a recent blog post. Efforts to limit the cases subject to extradition would not prevent suspects from being subject to China's "incommunicado torture chambers, its denial of competent legal defenders and its unfair trials."

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Most Hong Kong residents belong to families fleeing poverty and political upheavals in the communist mainland. British rule did not bequeath them democracy, but it laid the foundations for strong civic institutions, schools, health care -- as well as a laissez faire trading regime dominated by business leaders deeply invested in keeping Hong Kong as it is.

Normally reluctant to wade into political matters or criticize Beijing, businesses also expressed concern over the extradition bill, with the Hong Kong General Chamber of Commerce noting the protests reflected "serious apprehensions." The chamber welcomed the government's decision to suspend the bill, as did its American and British counterparts.

It's unclear if the turnout for another big protest planned for the July 1 anniversary of Hong Kong's 1997 handover to Chinese control might match the earlier ones.

Lam's push for the now stalled legislation, ill-timed around the 30th anniversary of the June 4, 1989, crackdown on pro-democracy protests in Beijing's Tiananmen Square, and the tear gas, steel batons and other aggressive tactics used by police, especially in June 12 protests that turned violent, helped draw people young and old into the streets.

Activists want an investigation into the complaints over police violence, along with Lam's resignation and other demands. But the continued protests reflect a deeper sense of grievance and unease, especially among Hong Kong residents coming of age in an era of declining economic opportunity, said Ken Courtis, chairman of Starfort Investment Holdings.

"Social mobility is more and more theoretical in Hong Kong, so young people continue to be very dissatisfied. There's a broader concern about China in Hong Kong. The economy's not growing like people thought it would grow," Courtis said.

In many respects, Hong Kong faces the same sorts of challenges of other developed economies with aging populations and slowing growth.

The city of 7 million has an economy bigger than Vietnam's and a per capita GDP of more than $46,000. But controls on land use favor property developers, and half the apartments available rent for $2,550 a month or more, while median monthly incomes are about $2,300.

In a city dominated by business leaders and other elites, the only leverage protesters can wield is "the power of numbers," said Yuen, noting surveys of those participating in protests in recent weeks generally identify with the city's "grassroots or lower classes."

"They see themselves as lower class because of crony capitalism in Hong Kong. It's very hard for them to get a fine-paying job and also to buy an apartment in Hong Kong," he said.

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