Once again Beijing has made it clear, Hong Kong can't have decide its own destiny, and what little say people will eventually have will have to be acceptable to Beijing. No election in 2012 and no pressure on China from the West, no surprise there.
Activists attack China ruling on Hong Kong democracy
HONG KONG (AFP) — China said Saturday it may allow Hong Kong's leader to be directly elected by 2017 but activists seeking quicker democratic reform in the former British colony criticised the decision.
The announcement is Beijing's clearest indication yet of the city's political future but has upset democrats pushing for 2012 as the deadline to achieve full democracy in the Asian financial hub, a timetable China rejected.
The election of Hong Kong's chief executive "may be implemented by the method of universal suffrage" in 2017, said Qiao Xiaoyang, a senior official from the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress.
Elections may later be held for all members of Hong Kong's Legislative Council, the official from China's top legislature said in a report carried by the state-run Xinhua news agency.
But China's parliament ruled out the direct election of Hong Kong's chief executive and the whole legislature in 2012, Xinhua said.
The congress released its decision after considering a report on reform submitted by Hong Kong leader Donald Tsang, who did not propose a timetable.
Speaking at a press conference, Tsang hailed the ruling, saying it was possible that one-man-one-vote would elect Hong Kong's leader by 2017, and that all Legislative Council members may be elected by universal suffrage by 2020.
"The timetable for attaining universal suffrage has been set. Hong Kong is entering a most important chapter in its constitutional history," he told reporters.
But China's parliament said constitutional amendments were necessary ahead of reforms and that it had to approve those changes before elections could take place. Analysts said that meant Beijing could still stall the process.
"What they are saying is that we may be able to see full elections by 2017," said James Sung, a political scientist at Hong Kong's City University.
"But if the Hong Kong people, democrats and other political parties cannot agree on the details of the amendments and if (China) is not happy with them, it still may not allow universal suffrage by that year," he said.
Pro-democracy activists criticised Saturday's decision, saying it fell short of guaranteeing universal suffrage. They later led more than 1,000 people in a protest march through Hong Kong.
"We strongly condemn the decision that violates the opinion of the majority people," they said in a joint statement, adding Hong Kong may not have full democracy as much as 20 years after its 1997 handover from Britain to China.
"I am very angry. I think Hong Kong people are mature enough to have universal suffrage now," lawmaker Emily Lau told AFP.
"What the (parliament) gave was a vague idea of when universal suffrage might happen. It didn't give a definite answer. We are talking about a guarantee and this is not a guarantee," she said.
Lawmaker Audrey Eu, fighting back tears, said political reform was taking too long.
"How much longer do we have to wait? Hong Kong people should not give up easily," she said.
The Basic Law, established when Hong Kong returned to Chinese rule, guarantees universal suffrage but did not set a timetable for achieving it.
Currently, only half of Hong Kong's 60-member legislature is directly elected, while the rest of the seats are held by representatives of various business and professional groups mostly loyal to Beijing.
Hong Kong's political leader is chosen by an 800-strong committee whose members mostly support Beijing. China retains the right to have the final say on political reform in the southern city.
Tsang urged Hong Kong's citizens and political parties to forge a consensus on the controversial issue of democratic change.
"If emotional debate and conflict between political parties drags on over this matter, Hong Kong's stability and development will be severely hampered," he said.
But protester Wong Yu-hin, a 70-year-old retired electrician, said he had little chance of seeing universal suffrage.
"At least I hope the next generation will be able to enjoy it," he said.
Of course, ACB won't be holding their breath for 2017. If this blogger were a gambler, they'd be laying down odds that sometime around 2015 Beijing will stand up and declare that Hong Kong isn't ready for democracy in 2017, and that stability is more important than democracy so that is what the people shall have.
Right now, Beijing is afraid that if Hong Kong goes democratic, then the Mainland will want to go democratic, too. I can't see this fear abating any time soon.
HK has been screwed over in 2007 just like it was screwed over in 1997, and just like in 1997, the West is standing by and watching.
Apparently Iraq can have democracy but not HK. Maybe ... if HK had oil?
You know, I'm not sure it has anything to do with oil, I think it's more
that China is too strong now. And who's fault is that, well it's the west
that buys up their cheap goods allowing the Chinese government to use huge
sums of money to develop weapons. I think the West is afraid of China now.
If the whole worlds stopped buying Chinese goods and boycotted the Olympics
would it work? Who knows, maybe it's too late...ciao
Er, about the oil, It was kinda a joke. You know .... like America invaded
Iraq to get the oil but said that it was for democracy ..... maybe if HK
had oil......
SUPERPOWER!
Yep, certainly a job for SUPERPOWER. Unfortunately Beijing has a good ol'
stockpile of economic-Kryptonit ready for just such an emergency.
So who in the West do you look to? And how do you suppose they might help?
You have always taken a realpolitik point of view, so why are you so
shocked at realism on the part of the rest of the world?
In situations like this I generally draw people's attention to the irony
and the hypocrisy of it all, and to the fact that the West can't/won't act
because almost everything that they could possibly do to China would create
significant ripples that China could weather better than they could.
Britain did not sell out Hong Kong – the lease was up. When the US lease on
Guantanamo is up, I pray we will leave with equal grace. England did what
it could for the Hong Kongese – it left in place the present democratic
institutions and it offered British passports to all. Are you taking part
in the former or enjoying the latter.
Dave Zimmerman:
The number of fronts on which I am wrong seems to have been three.
Actually, you were wrong on more than three fronts, but there is something
to be said for keeping things brief. Though I will point out that many many
Chinese living overseas are/were actually either economic migrants or
refugees. The BN(O) merely allowed you to leave via plane, rather than by
fishing trawler, and even then many holders simply couldn't leave for
financial reasons or because they had family who couldn't get a BN(O). For
example, many HK residents had parents and grandparents who fled from the
Mainland who were not eligible for the BN(O). The truth is that Britain was
afraid of mass Asian migration and wary of upsetting relations with China
and so put in place a weasel passport that offered very little to
comparatively few. You might also be surprised to see how many wealthy HK
and HK civil servants received papers when compared to how many poor HK
residents
One person one vote DOES NOT guarantee anything. Many countries in Africa
and Middle East have this kind of voting system, but they are in a mess.
Some Hong Kong people are too obsessed with ideology. May be someone wants
to be the first Prime Minister of Hong Kong, that is why the persons
concerned are so enthusiastic in the fight for “Democracy”.
Yeah, but Africa and the middle east places are a mess for other reasons.
Usually because of ethnic/tribal tensions, poverty, and corruption. HK has
none of those problems, it is stable, prosperous and peaceful. The only
thing that it isn't is free to direct its own affair.
This item reallly touched me. No anger, just individual resolution.
From http://chinadigitaltimes.net/2008/01/year_after_year_xu_xing_and_he_ji
awei.php