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Conflicts

Xi Jinping backs Hong Kong's Carrie Lam

November 4, 2019

Xi Jinping has said he "highly trusts" Carrie Lam's Hong Kong government as the city enters its 22nd week of protests. The Chinese president has called for Hong Kong to implement "one country, two systems" policies.

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Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam and Chinese President Xi Jinping in Shanghai
Image: picture-alliance/Xinhua News Agency/J- Peng

Chinese President Xi Jinping offered his full support to Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam and her administration when the two met in Shanghai on Monday, according to the state-run Xinhua news agency.

Xi stated that his Beijing government "fully recognizes" and "highly trusts" the work of Lam and her administration as the city faces ongoing protests. He said Hong Kong, under Lam's leadership, has done a lot of hard work to control the situation and improve sentiment in society. 

Read more: Hong Kong crisis: What you need to know

The Chinese president also said Hong Kong should keep as its top priority stopping the violence and chaos and restoring order. He said he also hopes that citizens from "all walks of life" will fully implement policies under the so-called "one country, two systems" principle, which allows for the former British colony to enjoy greater autonomy than the mainland.

Ongoing protests

Xi's statements came after a weekend during which scores of people were injured in anti-government protests in Hong Kong, including one that left a man in critical condition after he fell from a height, authorities said. Twelve officers were also injured.

Police arrested more than 300 people between the ages of 14 and 54. 

Read more: Hong Kong frees murder suspect whose case sparked protests

The incidents kicked off a 22nd week of widespread protests, which have seen hundreds of thousands of people take to the streets since mid-June. On Monday, Chinese state media called for a tougher line against protesters after some vandalized Xinhua's offices in Hong Kong. 

On Monday evening, more than 100 demonstrators, some wearing now-banned face masks, returned to a shopping center where a pro-Beijing man had knifed several people and bit off a part of a politician's ear.

The demonstrations started as a protest over a now scrapped extradition bill proposed by the Beijing government, which drew international condemnation. The protests have since morphed into a pro-democracy campaign against what demonstrators see as Chinese meddling with freedoms promised when the former British colony returned to Chinese rule in 1997. 

dv/aw (dpa, Reuters)

 

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