Uneasy calm falls over Hong Kong as local elections ramp up

Only a handful of protesters are holding out at a besieged campus and candidates have called for calm as Hong Kong prepares to vote in local elections.

A person walks past a banner showing the way to a polling station for the 2019 District Council Ordinary Election in Hong Kong.

A person walks past a banner showing the way to a polling station for the 2019 District Council Ordinary Election in Hong Kong. Source: EPA

An uneasy calm has settled over Hong Kong as the city prepares to go to the polls for local elections seen as a referendum on months of anti-government protests.

On the grounds of the besieged Polytechnic University on the Kowloon peninsula, a dwindling number of protesters desperately sought a way out and others vowed not to surrender, days after some of the worst violence since anti-government demonstrations escalated in June.
A protester (L) is checked by the police as he surrenders outside the main entrance of the campus of the Hong Kong Polytechnic University.
A protester (L) is checked by the police as he surrenders outside the main entrance of the campus of the Hong Kong Polytechnic University. Source: AFP
One student protester who escaped the police cordon around the university without being arrested said on Saturday he had not expected the elections to go ahead.

"I don't feel optimistic about the outcome at all," he said, predicting that the discontent will only escalate. "I cannot see the end in sight."

The city is under tight security as a record 1104 people gear up to run for 452 district council seats in Sunday's elections.

A record 4.1 million Hong Kong people, from a population of 7.4 million, have enrolled to vote, spurred in part by registration campaigns during months of protests.
Staff members prepare a polling station for the 2019 District Council Ordinary Election in Hong Kong.
Staff members prepare a polling station for the 2019 District Council Ordinary Election in Hong Kong. Source: EPA
For the first time, riot police will guard all polling stations in the city and almost all officers in the 31,000-strong force will be on duty, the South China Morning Post reported, citing a senior police source.

The source told the newspaper that the officers would seek to minimise their presence to avoid worrying voters.

Asked about the report, the police department would say only that it had been liaising with other departments to provide assistance, arrange "appropriate police force", and ensure that the election was carried out smoothly and in an orderly manner.

At a Chinese People's Liberation Army barracks that borders Polytechnic University, meanwhile, dozens of soldiers in riot gear were seen practising drills, according to a Reuters witness.

PLA soldiers have not publicly engaged in anti-riot efforts on the streets of Hong Kong but such drills suggest a high degree of preparedness amid the current protests.
Joshua Wong (L) campaigns with his replacement candidate Kelvin Lam (R) in Hong Kong.
Joshua Wong (L) campaigns with his replacement candidate Kelvin Lam (R) in Hong Kong. Source: Getty Images AsiaPac
Both Chinese and Hong Kong leaders have repeatedly said Hong Kong police can handle the situation but Beijing has more than doubled the number of troops in the city since late August, with up to 12,000 on bases scattered across the territory.

The protests snowballed from June after years of resentment over what many residents see as Chinese meddling in freedoms promised to Hong Kong when the former British colony returned to Chinese rule in 1997.

Beijing has said it is committed to the "one country, two systems" formula by which Hong Kong is governed. It denies meddling in the affairs of Hong Kong, an Asian financial hub, and accuses foreign governments of stirring up trouble.
However, The Age newspaper reported on Saturday that an apparent Chinese intelligence service agent is seeking asylum in Australia after saying he had details on Beijing's political interference in Hong Kong, Taiwan and Australia.

Young pro-democracy activists are running in some of the seats that were once uncontested and dominated by pro-Beijing candidates.

One pro-democracy candidate for the Wan Chai district council, Chris Chan, said the election would reflect public opinion after the upheaval of recent months.

"It is time for us to calm down and tell the government in a civilised way what we want to do," he said.

Few protesters were still visible on the campus, and a visiting lawmaker said their number was so small that there is no need for the police to enter the campus.

Many of the remaining protesters were in hiding, fearful of possible arrest and wary of those urging surrender, said Woo Kwok Wang, the 22-year-old acting president of the university's student union.

About 1000 people have been arrested or registered by police in the university siege, about 300 of them younger than 18.


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