Business Standard

Wednesday, December 25, 2024 | 01:43 PM ISTEN Hindi

Notification Icon
userprofile IconSearch

Young Hongkongers boycott Tiananmen vigil

Young activists turned their backs on the candle-lit vigil as calls grow for greater autonomy from China

China marks 27th anniversary of Tiananmen square rebellion

AFPPTI Hong Kong
Crowds gathered on Saturday for Hong Kong's commemoration of the bloody Tiananmen Square crackdown but many young activists turned their backs on the candle-lit vigil as calls grow for greater autonomy from China.

The vigil, which each year draws tens of thousands to the city's Victoria Park, has caused a widening rift in Hong Kong's pro-democracy camp between those who believe the victims of the crackdown should be remembered and those who see the event's message as increasingly irrelevant.

Semi-autonomous Hong Kong is the only location on Chinese soil to see a major commemoration to mark the military's brutal crushing of pro-democracy protests in central Beijing in 1989.
 
But young activists from the new "localist" movement say Hong Kong should push for its own autonomy, even independence, rather than the democratisation of the mainland, which is part of the vigil's main message.

Localism grew out of the failure of the 2014 student-led pro-democracy rallies to gain concessions from China on political reform for Hong Kong, and a growing number of student groups have now broken away from the event.

Students at a forum at Hong Kong University, one of several alternative events held to compete with the main vigil, said they felt little connection with the traditional commemoration.

"We're the new generation— it is more meaningful for us to do this. We have to stand against the Chinese regime, but we also have to think about Hong Kong's future," said student Raven Kwok, 20, among around 200 who had gathered for the forum.

President of HKU's student union, Althea Suen, said the fight was now about democracy for Hong Kong.

Building a democratic China was "not our responsibility", she said.

The Hong Kong Federation of Students— a founding member of the alliance that organises the vigil— also stayed away this year, saying the event had "lost touch" with Hong Kongers.

The pro-independence Hong Kong National Party added that, while young people still feel sorry for the students killed in 1989, "they don't share the same memory of Chinese identity with the older generation."

Others were more acerbic in their criticism.

Shue Yan University student union likened the organisers of the vigil to "pimps and bawds who run a brothel after they got raped themselves" on a Facebook post.

Don't miss the most important news and views of the day. Get them on our Telegram channel

First Published: Jun 04 2016 | 6:58 PM IST

Explore News