Hundreds of thousands of pro-democracy protesters marched in Hong Kong on Tuesday, many calling for the city's leader to be sacked, in what could turn out to be the biggest challenge to Chinese Communist Party rule in more than a decade.
Hong Kong Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying said his government would do its "utmost" to move towards universal suffrage and stressed the need for stability after nearly 800,000 people voted for full democracy in an unofficial referendum last month.
Organisers put the number of protesters at more than 510,000, emphasising this was a conservative estimate. Police said some 98,600 had joined the protest at its peak.
Tension is running high after the referendum. Roads were closed off around Victoria Park, where the rally started. Surrounded by police, demonstrators marched to Central, some shouting, "Overthrow the Chinese Communist Party." People were still leaving the park as the first protesters reached Central after four hours' marching.
Anson Chan, Hong Kong's former top civil servant and a key supporter of the unofficial referendum, said the vote was clear.
"They (voters) are not taken in by recent suggestions that we should pocket whatever we are offered in the hope that more would come later," she said. "This is just rubbish."
Organisers of the annual July 1 rally, marking the day the territory returned to China in 1997, were expecting the largest turnout since 2003, when half a million people demonstrated against proposed anti-subversion laws that were later scrapped.
http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/07/01/us-hongkong-protests-idUSKBN0F632A20140701
Live updates and stream:
http://www.scmp.com/article/1544215/live-thousands-gather-ahead-july-1-march-barricades-go-central
http://new.livestream.com/vdo/71live
Hoping my friends and all others will be alright. I'm scared that they don't stand a chance though. Real democracy will not happen with the current Beijing leadership. The mainland influence and control is only going to increase in coming decades.