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Hong Kong marks 15 years since Chinese handover

BBC

Hong Kong marks 15 years since Chinese handover

Hu Jintao offered greetings to the people of Hong Kong

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Hong Kong has begun marking the 15th anniversary since its handover from UK to Chinese control.

Chinese President Hu Jintao is leading the main events. He earlier swore in businessman CY Leung as the city’s new leader.

Small groups of protesters have tried to disrupt his visit.

One of their main gripes is the system used to choose Hong Kong’s leader, which many residents see as designed to install Beijing’s choice.

A so-called electoral college of 1,200 business leaders and other influential citizens, mostly loyal to Beijing, chooses the leader.

At the swearing-in ceremony, Mr Hu offered “warm congratulations” to Mr Leung and his team and described the 15th anniversary as a “joyous occasion”.

He reiterated Beijing’s commitment to the “one country, two systems” policy whereby Hong Kongers are allowed many more political freedoms than their mainland neighbours.

A resident carrying Hong Kong and Chinese flags attends a flag-raising ceremony to mark the 15th anniversary of the territory's handover to Chinese rule, in Hong Kong July 1While many Hong Kongers were happy to join in the celebrations…

A lone heckler stood and shouted at the Chinese president during the speech, but he was quickly bundled out of the harbourfront building.

The ceremony took place under tight security.

The BBC’s Juliana Liu in Hong Kong says Mr Hu’s visit has been carefully choreographed.

But on Saturday police had to shield the president from demonstrators, and officers used pepper spray to disperse crowds who were demanding an investigation into the death of an activist, Li Wangyang, earlier this year.

One local journalist confronted Mr Hu over the 1989 Tiananmen massacre of protesters.

A pro-democracy demonstrator kicks a fence during a protest outside the Grand Hyatt hotel, where Chinese President Hu Jintao is staying, in Hong Kong July 1…others saw fit to vent their anger at the visiting Chinese leader

It is a far cry from Mr Hu’s last visit five years ago, when he toured Hong Kong in a blaze of pre-Olympic glory, says our correspondent.

His arrival comes as public confidence in the Beijing government has fallen to a new low.

The people are unhappy with record property prices, an increasing wealth gap, a lack of democracy and a string of political scandals.

An annual protest to support human rights is due to take place later, with tens of thousands expected to attend.

Hong Kong, a British colony until 1997, has a comparatively high degree of autonomy from Beijing.

But Communist leaders in Beijing have resisted public pressure for full democracy in the city.

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