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Friday, March 29, 2024 | Back issues
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Hong Kong Soccer Fans Boo Chinese National Anthem

Thousands of Hong Kong soccer fans booed and turned their backs when the Chinese national anthem was played before a World Cup qualifier match against Iran on Tuesday, taking the city's months of protests into the sports realm.

HONG KONG (AP) — Thousands of Hong Kong soccer fans booed and turned their backs when the Chinese national anthem was played before a World Cup qualifier match against Iran on Tuesday, taking the city's months of protests into the sports realm.

The crowd broke out into "Glory to Hong Kong," a song reflecting their campaign for more democratic freedoms in the semi-autonomous Chinese territory.

After the match started, fans chanted "Fight for freedom" and "Revolution of our Times." One person carried a blue poster stating: "Hong Kong is not China."

Hong Kong has been roiled by protests since June over an extradition bill that would have sent some residents to mainland China for trial. The government promised last week to withdraw the bill but that failed to placate the protesters, whose demands now include democratic reforms and police accountability.

Fans were already chanting slogans as they streamed into the Hong Kong Stadium.

Security was tight, with fans frisked to ensure they did not bring in political materials and other prohibited items. Iran, Asia's top team, had sought to move the match, citing safety concerns, but the request was rejected by FIFA, soccer's governing body.

Stadium announcers said 14,000 spectators attended.

In July, Hong Kong fans chanted slogans and waved banners when English Premier League champions Manchester City played local team Kitchee at the stadium.

Many see the extradition bill as a glaring example of the city's eroding autonomy since the former British colony was returned to Chinese control in 1997. Clashes have become increasingly violent, with police firing tear gas after protesters vandalized subway stations, set street fires and blocked traffic over the weekend.

Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam renewed an appeal to protesters Tuesday, to "say no to violence" and engage in dialogue, and the city's richest man urged the government to provide a way out for the mostly young demonstrators.

Lam said the escalation of violence, in which more than 150 people including students have been arrested since Friday, will deepen rifts and prolong the road to recovery.

She said her decision to withdraw the extradition bill and her other initiatives reflected her sincerity to heal society by initiating a direct dialogue with various communities, including protesters.

Billionaire Li Ka Shing, in a video broadcast on local TV, described the summer of unrest as the worst catastrophe since World War II. In his first public comments, Li called youths the "masters of our future" and said the government should temper justice with mercy in resolving the crisis.

"I am very worried. We hope Hong Kong people will be able to ride out the storm. We hope the young people can consider the big picture and those at the helm can give the masters of our future a way out," Li, 91, told a religious gathering outside a Buddhist temple over the weekend.

Asked about Li's comments, Lam agreed that the government "can do more and can do better" especially in meeting young people to hear their grievances.

But she said the government cannot condone violence and will strictly enforce the law.

The unrest has become the biggest challenge to Beijing's rule since it took over Hong Kong and is an embarrassment to its ruling Communist Party before the Oct. 1 celebrations of its 70th year in power. Beijing has slammed the protests as an effort by criminals to split the territory from China, backed by what it said were hostile foreigners, including the United States.

Beijing rebuked Germany on Tuesday for allowing prominent Hong Kong activist Joshua Wong to visit "to engage in anti-China separatist activities."

Wong met Foreign Minister Heiko Maas in Berlin late Monday at an event hosted by the German newspaper Bild.

Chinese foreign ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said Maas' "political show" with Wong showed disrespect to China's sovereignty and was an interference in its internal affairs. She urged Germany to avoid sending the wrong signal to "radical, separatist forces in Hong Kong" and said any efforts to solicit foreign support to split the country are "doomed to fail."

In an immediate response, Wong tweeted that Chinese 's strong reaction was "baffling."

Wong, a leader of Hong Kong's 2014 pro-democracy protest movement, was charged in August with inciting people to join a protest in June. His prosecution came after his release from prison in June after a two-month sentence related to the 2014 protests.

Lam also reiterated Tuesday that attempts by foreign nations to interfere in Hong Kong's internal affairs over freedom and civil liberties in the city were "totally unnecessary."

She said the government has the "obligation and duties" to safeguard the city's autonomy.

Categories / International

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