HK government official to meet with Occupy Central students
Updated: 2014-10-03 03:04
(Xinhua)
|
|||||||||
Hong Kong Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying (R) speaks beside Chief Secretary Carrie Lam during a news conference in Hong Kong, late Oct 2, 2014. [Photo/Agencies] |
HONG KONG - Hong Kong's Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying announced late Thursday evening that he will not resign and is appointing Chief Secretary Carrie Lam as government representative to talk with students participating in the ongoing Occupy Central movement.
Leung and Lam held a short press conference at Government House in Central District minutes before a deadline set by students group which demands Leung's resignation.
Thousands of protesters blocked major roads in several districts in Hong Kong since Sept 28 to express discontent with electoral reform package for choosing the region's next leader.
Students issued an open letter asking for a meeting with the Chief Secretary on Thursday evening. Leung said the government has studied the letter in detail. Carrie Lam said she wished to contact students as soon as possible to arrange the meeting, but neither she or Leung gave a specific date.
Leung stressed that he will not resign, saying he will continue to work for promoting Hong Kong's constitutional reform which aims at universal suffrage to elect the region's next chief executive in 2017.
The Chief Executive said the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR) government and the police force have shown the greatest patience and endurance in the past five days.
Leung hoped that all circles in society could continue to carry forward the constitutional reform in a pragmatic, rational and peaceful manner.
- Hong Kong gov't urges immediate end to Occupy Central
- Cherish HK's development, maintain long-term prosperity
- Protests will leave deep scars in Hong Kong SAR
- Chinese mainland is Hong Kong's future: the Guardian
- High-wire act for US, Britain to interfere in Hong Kong affairs
- Hong Kong's distribution services and logistics disrupted by 'Occupy'
- 'One Country', 'Two Systems' vital to HK
- HK must capitalize on 'One Country', 'Two Systems': HK Chief Executive
- HK police used tear-gas to provide safety for all
- HK is paying the price
- MFA reiterates opposition to foreign interference in HK
- HK chief executive urges protest stoppage
- HK and mainland are a winning team
- 'Occupy' is seeking regime change in HK
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
KMT veterans recognized |
Top 8 expenses during the National Day holiday |
Alibaba - Journey of the tech giant |
Top 10 cheapest new energy cars promoted in China |
11th China-ASEAN Expo |
Go Wuxi: Canal city in transition |
Today's Top News
Evernote announces new products
US visas hinder talent search: expert
Awareness of breast cancer symptoms lacking: Survey
IMF calls for more global growth
HK official to meet with Occupy Central students
'One Country, Two Systems' vital
China, US voice commitment to ties
Obama, Chinese FM meet on relations
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |