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I am a Practitioner of 'The 7e Way of Leaders' where a Leader will Envision, Enable (ASK for TOP D), Empower, Execute, Energize, and Evolve grounded on ETHICS!

Tuesday, September 30, 2014

Daily Lessons from Life 30 September 2014 - Hong Kong protests: Voices of dissent

The LAST day of September 2014 - 9 months have just passed us by! Hopefully most of us are making reasonable progress on the New Year Resolutions we made on 1 January 2014! If not, we have 3 more months to do something about them! Still hopeful!!

"Hong Kong protests: Voices of dissent - AFP Sep 30, 2014

HONG KONG - For the past two nights they have come in their tens of thousands - students, teenagers, parents, professionals and the elderly alike. All are demanding a more democratic future for Hong Kong, a city that was once a byword for stability yet has been plunged into its worst unrest since the former British colony was handed back to China in 1997.

Student groups are spearheading a civil disobedience campaign alongside a network of pro-democracy democracy groups. And those heeding protest leaders' calls to hit the streets are as varied as the city itself.

The arrested student When Sonia Man went to her first demonstration three years ago, she never imagined it would lead to her arrest Saturday morning after staging a 16-hour sit in outside the city's government offices. The night before she was arrested she also dismissed the possibility, saying she wasn't "ready". But the following evening the 20-year-old cultural studies major with dyed blond hair and braces found herself in a crowd of a hundred students rushing into a government square that had been sealed by the authorities.

"I was scared, at first I didn't want to participate but I knew I had to for the sake of my future," Man told AFP after she was released.

She sent a text message to her mother after she began her sit-in, surrounded by a phalanx of police. The next time her parents saw their daughter was on TV, hauled away by four policemen as she chanted "Democracy now!" "I'm worried about my future," she admitted. "If my arrest means I have a government that can fix problems like housing, jobs and education, then I don't care how many times I go to prison."

The newly political father Jasper Poon, 33, brought his four-year-old son Anthony to the protests in downtown Hong Kong, carrying him past shuttered luxury shops. While Anthony asked to be taken home, Poon pointed to a group huddled around a loudspeaker listening to updates from across the protest lines.

"I need to teach him about democracy and about the meaning of people power," Poon said. "These students are fighting for his future so I want him to see what that means firsthand." A stocky bank teller dressed in the protesters' uniform of a black shirt with a yellow ribbon, Poon said he had never been particularly active in politics, aside from the occasional candlelight vigil in remembrance of those killed in the Tiananmen crackdown in 1989 when Beijing violently suppressed student protests.

But he said this time was different, and thought the outcome would directly affect his son's ability to make a better life for himself.

The professional defying her parents Kwok Kayi has been slipping out at night to join the protesters, defying her mother's wishes that she stay at home. The 23-year-old curtain designer felt compelled to hit the streets after viewing pictures on Facebook over the weekend of striking students.

"The middle of the night is the only time I can express myself. My parents don't support me," she said during a lull in the demonstrations when many around her had already started sleeping on the street. "My mother is really worried, but she also doesn't understand how important this is." Kwok's squabble with her parents highlights a generational divide that many thought would doom the protest movement as it failed to attract support beyond the city's youth.

But as the demonstrations escalated, more and more older people have joined. The former colonial police officer Anderson Mike, 60, a former Hong Kong police officer during the British colonial era, recently spent 48 hours straight on the streets. A Hong Kong-native of Pakistani descent, he found himself in a stand-off with a force he used to be a part of. "Hong Kong people are now second-class citizens to mainland Chinese in their own city," Mike said, shortly after picking up a spent tear gas canister. "Hong Kongers have been betrayed by politicians, and after 17 years people have woken up and realised it's time for a change," he added.

He lamented what he called the erosion of social justice in the city in recent years and felt the sharp increase in inequality simmered just under the surface of the ongoing protests. "I'm not here for myself," he said "I'm here for others so the next generation is not a slave to a system that ignores the people.""

Need I write more? The student, the father, the professional and an ex-Hkg policeman are all protesting.

My concerns:

1. if they really want to protest, they have to prepare for the worst! The mainland government just need to cut off: free-and-easy traveling from across the border and stop H-share trading in Hkg and that will bring the OTHER affected people onto the streets to FIGHT these 'freedom and rights' fighters'!;

2. with so much at stake, the ruling Communist Party leadership is unable, even if they want to, to accede to the request as there are hardliners within them agitating for tough actions. Some of them were already riled by the anti-corruption measures taken by the new leadership team led by President Xi and Premier Li! When it comes to this type of conflict of interest, the decision to easy - to preserve the current power balance at ALL COSTS!!;

3. may be there will another wave of migration from Hkg to the rest of the world after the pre-1997 wave. However, the macro environment are NOT friendly to this potential new wave with many 'advance countries' like USA, UK, Australia, Canada, New Zealand and some European countries already feeling the pressure of having TOO MANY Chinese migrants in recent times. Of course, some will get political asylum terms but that will not be too many!

It is an unenviable position to be in. I am glad I am in Singapore given the circumstance.

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