http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-11-15/hong-kong-police-prepare-to-clear-protesters-as-appeals-rejected.html
Hong Kong’s police commissioner said his force will help clear pro-democracy protest sites that have disrupted the city for seven weeks, as a judge dismissed demonstrators’ appeals against orders to remove them.
High Court Chief Judge Andrew Cheung Kui-nung’s ruling means bailiffs can remove obstructions in the two main protest sites -- Mong Kok on the north side of Victoria Harbour, and Admiralty, where the city’s government headquarters are located. Under the injunctions, police are authorized to assist in the clearing and arrest anyone who interferes.
The ruling may reignite violent clashes between police and protesters as government talks with student leaders are stalled andChina refuses to give in to demands for free elections in the city in 2017. Chinese President Xi Jinping last week expressed support for Hong Kong leader Leung Chun-ying while hosting the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation Forum in Beijing.
The Hong Kong Federation of Students will send three of its leaders to Beijing today to seek talks with Chinese officials on its pro-democracy demands after its requests to former Chief Executive Tung Chee-hwa and Rita Fan, a Hong Kong deputy to China’s National People’s Congress, went unheeded.
The federation wants China to reverse a decision to vet candidates for Hong Kong’s chief executive election in 2017, the group said in a statement posted on its Facebook page. Secretary General Alex Chow will be accompanied on the trip by standing committee members Eason Chung and Nathan Law, it said.
The protest movement that has occupied Hong Kong’s streets in main commercial districts since September is losing momentum amid dissent among its leaders and dwindling crowds. Chief Secretary Carrie Lam has ruled out more talks with the students.
Rows of tents stand outside the Central Government Offices in the Admiralty district of Hong Kong, China, on Thursday, Nov. 13. The protest movement that has occupied Hong Kong’s streets in main commercial districts since September is losing momentum amid dissent among its leaders and dwindling crowds.
Protesters gather next to metal barricades near the Central Government Offices in the Admiralty district of Hong Kong, China, yesterday. High Court Chief Judge Andrew Cheung Kui-nung’s ruling means bailiffs can remove obstructions in the two main protest sites -- Mong Kok on the north side of Victoria Harbour, and Admiralty, where the city’s government headquarters are located.
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