| Hong Kong voters go to polls |
| Global | ||||||
| By Agencies | ||||||
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The polls opened at 23:30 GMT on Sunday across the southern Chinese city. Sixty legislature seats are to be contested for. The vote is expected to provide an insight into the state of the pro-democracy parties in Hong Kong in the face of growing Chinese patriotism. In the 2004 elections, and against the background of huge anti-government sentiment, pan-democrats secured about 60 per cent of the vote. But this only earned them 25 legislative seats due to the vagaries of Hong Kong's political system. Despite the waning popularity of the current government, the pan-democrats have not been able to take advantage of the dissatisfaction, with polls suggesting their number of seats could fall. Political obscurity In addition to the retirement of Martin Lee and Anson Chan, widely viewed as pro-democracy politicians, several other senior politicians could be relegated to political obscurity. Two of the most senior politicans - Emily Lau, a former journalist and outspoken government critic and activist "Long Hair" Leung Kwok-hung - could lose their seats, a Hong Kong University poll showed.
"Hong Kong will not remain fair, open and democratic unless we are willing to fight. I am willing to fight and I ask you now for the greatest privilege of all: to fight for you," Leung said in an advert in the Sunday Morning Post. The remaining 30 "functional constituencies" represent various business and industry interests chosen by select electorates. Polls close at 14:30 GMT and results are expected to be in by Monday. Universal suffrage Hong Kong was promised universal suffrage for both its legislature and chief executive when colonial power Britain handed back the territory to China in 1997, but no specific timetable was set.
Tags: Hong Kong |
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