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Hong Kong formally scraps extradition bill that sparked protests | Hong Kong formally scraps extradition bill that sparked protests |
(about 1 hour later) | |
Hong Kong's legislature has formally withdrawn a controversial extradition bill that has sparked months of unrest. | |
The bill - which would have allowed for criminal suspects to be extradited to mainland China - prompted outrage when it was introduced in April. | The bill - which would have allowed for criminal suspects to be extradited to mainland China - prompted outrage when it was introduced in April. |
Hundreds of thousands of people took to the streets and the bill was eventually suspended. | Hundreds of thousands of people took to the streets and the bill was eventually suspended. |
But protesters have continued regular demonstrations, which spiralled into a wider pro-democracy movement. | |
It is the worst crisis for Hong Kong since the former British colony was handed back to China in 1997. | |
It has also presented a serious challenge to China's leaders in Beijing, who have painted the demonstrators as dangerous separatists and accused foreign powers of backing them. | It has also presented a serious challenge to China's leaders in Beijing, who have painted the demonstrators as dangerous separatists and accused foreign powers of backing them. |
The proposed bill would have allowed for Hong Kong to extradite criminal suspects to places it does not have an extradition treaty with, including mainland China, Taiwan and Macau. | |
Critics of the planned law had feared extradition to mainland China could subject people to arbitrary detention and unfair trials. | |
The bill's formal withdrawal meets only one of five key demands emphasised by some protesters, who have often chanted "five demands, not one less" in Hong Kong's streets. | |
The others are: | |
Connie, a 27-year-old protester, told Reuters news agency the move was "too little, too late". | |
"There are still other demands the government needs to meet, especially the problem of police brutality," she said. | |
Carrie Lam, the embattled Hong Kong leader, has insisted that other demands by protesters are outside her control. | |
The protests - which began peacefully - now often descend into violent running battles between Hong Kong police and hardcore demonstrators who have vandalised shops and hurled petrol bombs at security forces. | |
Police have used water cannon, tear gas and rubber bullets in response. Live rounds have been fired on a few occasions, and an 18-year-old was shot by police in the chest on 1 October. | |
The Financial Times newspaper reports that China's government is drawing up plans to remove Ms Lam, a figure loathed by protesters whom Beijing has thus far stood by. | |
If Chinese President Xi Jinping approves the plan, the paper says, she will be replaced by an interim chief executive after calm returns to Hong Kong. | |
Ms Lam's office told the BBC: "We do not comment on speculation." China's foreign ministry said the FT report was "a political rumour with ulterior motives". | |
Separately on Wednesday, Hong Kong released the murder suspect whose case led to the extradition bill in the first place. | |
Chan Tong-kai is accused of murdering his pregnant girlfriend in Taiwan last year before fleeing back to Hong Kong. | |
But Hong Kong and Taiwan do not have an extradition treaty, and his case was cited when the government proposed amending the law. |
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