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Hong Kong celebrates 5 years in China

Associated Press

A pro-democracy activist is tossed in the air during a scuffle with police and is carried out of the crowd outside of the Central Government House, June 30 in Hong Kong. Police scuffled with pro-democracy activists on Sunday, shortly after Chinese President Jiang Zemin flew in to commemorate the fifth anniversary of Hong Kongās handover to China.

Associated Press
Tuesday July 2, 2002

HONG KONG ÷ As protesters lashed out at Beijingās "murderous regime," President Jiang Zemin marked Hong Kongās first five years back in China by saying Monday it had retained its capitalist ways and now should support the mainland.

Right after Chief Executive Tung Chee-hwa was sworn in to a second term, Jiang urged everyone in the former British colony to "keep enhancing their sense of the country and of the nation."

Outside the anniversary ceremonies ÷ and out of earshot of the dignitaries ÷ demonstrators clamored for improved human rights in the mainland, an accounting for the 1989 massacre of students in Beijingās Tiananmen Square and an "end to the one-party dictatorship."

The protests showed Hong Kong retains Western-style freedoms unheard of in mainland China, although pro-democracy activists complained police are making it more difficult.

"Down with Jiang Zemin," several dozen chanted as they marched with a mock coffin condemning Chinaās "murderous regime."

Police halted them at one point, saying they wanted to check the coffin for nails or spikes that could be used to hurt people.

Nearby, about 100 Falun Gong practitioners sat in lotus positions in a silent appeal for Beijing to stop its deadly crackdown on the meditation group outlawed in China as an "evil cult."

Falun Gong remains legal in Hong Kong but followers griped that immigration officials prevented more than 100 followers from entering to attend the protests.

The Hong Kong Security Bureau declined to discuss specifics but said police needed to ensure visitors "would not cause trouble."

Under cloudy morning skies, a police band solemnly hoisted the Chinese and Hong Kong flags to mark Hong Kongās return from Britain to China on July 1, 1997.

"It aroused a lot of patriotic feelings in me," said retired businessman Kao Lap, who waved a flag while singing along with Chinaās national anthem. "I think things can improve and I hope the next five years will be better."

Jiang said "the capitalist system and the lifestyle that Hong Kong residents are accustomed to have remained unchanged."

Critics fear Hong Kongās freedoms are fading. Many ordinary citizens are dissatisfied with Tung, and he has shown no inclination to move toward full democracy.

Breaking more than a yearās silence on Hong Kong politics, the territoryās popular former No. 2 official, Anson Chan, said Monday people will regain lost confidence if they get more say in who governs them.

"Somewhere along the way, we seem to have lost our ācan doā spirit," Chan wrote in Londonās Financial Times. Chan was appointed by the last British colonial governor and was seen as a bridge of stability through the handover. When she quit last year, many believed it was over disagreements with Tung.

Tung got a new Cabinet Monday of political appointees who will be easier to fire than civil servants who previously held top government jobs.

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