Friday, August 30, 2019

Save Hong Kong from violence


by Liang Xizhi and Gui Tao

 It was raining heavily in London on Sunday 18th August. Yet for thousands of overseas Chinese and Chinese students attending the lunchtime rally to voice out their demand for peace and stability in Hong Kong, such bad weather would never sink their passions.
Waving the Chinese national flag and the flag of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR), the crowd, sang the Chinese national anthem along the way from Chinatown to Trafalgar Square, and expressed their firm objection to violence and their strong support for the Hong Kong government and the Hong Kong police.
"I love Hong Kong, I love China" and "One China," chanted the crowd in Mandarin, Cantonese and English while holding placards written with slogans including "Stop Violence" and "Save Hong Kong”.
The weather cleared when participants of the peaceful rally, young and old, arrived at Trafalgar Square. They sang I Love You, China, My Chinese Heart and Pearl of the Orient among many other Chinese songs to show their solidarity and unity.
"We want to take today's opportunity to express our dissatisfaction with 'Hong Kong independence' and violence," said Zhang Yanqian, a student from Kingston University who participated in the rally.
"We speak the same language and keep the same blood. We should unite and make the motherland prosperous and strong," he said.
Zhang Feng, the chair of the Chinese Students and Scholars Association UK (CSSAUK), said the association “strongly supports the HKSAR government and police and firmly supports the one-China policy”.
The CSSAUK has called on Chinese students studying in Britain to remain calm and rationally patriotic to ensure their own safety, Zhang said.
The rally, co-hosted by the London Chinatown Chinese Association, the Hong Kong New Territories Heung Yee Kuk Overseas Liaison Office and more than 100 overseas Chinese communities in Britain, lasted for about an hour.
The rally was called to refute the lies of the “Hong Kong independence” organisations, to tell the outside world that Hong Kong is a democratic and free society, to express support for the Hong Kong government, and to oppose the violent protests over the past two months, said Chu Ting Tang, the chair of the London Chinatown Chinese Association.
For overseas Chinese Seuisang Gong, Sunday's rally was a good chance to show his support for the Hong Kong government and the Hong Kong police.
The Hong Kong government and the Hong Kong police should "unite and work together" to "implement the law and deal with all illegal things in accordance with the law," Gong said.
"I hope that the riots will be settled as soon as possible and these mobs will be brought to justice. We hope that the government can restore Hong Kong's social order as soon as possible and make people's livelihood more peaceful. I believe this is the most important thing," Gong said.
Xinhua

No comments: