Hong Kong tycoon Li Ka-shing urges love, not violence, in first protest comments

China has likened the increasingly violent protests to terrorism and warned it could use force to quell them, as U.S. President Donald Trump urged Xi meet protesters to defuse the tension.

August 16, 2019 09:17 am | Updated November 28, 2021 10:22 am IST - HONG KONG:

Hutchison Whampoa Chairman Li Ka-shing reacts beside a bottle of Watsons distilled water during a news conference in Hong Kong March 21, 2014.

Hutchison Whampoa Chairman Li Ka-shing reacts beside a bottle of Watsons distilled water during a news conference in Hong Kong March 21, 2014.

Hong Kong's richest man, Li Ka-shing, urged people to “love China, love Hong Kong and love yourself” on Friday in his first public comments on the escalating pro-democracy protests that have disrupted the city for weeks and challenged China.

Mr. Li's message in front-page advertisements in major newspapers in the Asian financial hub urged the public to “cease the anger with love” and “stop the violence”. The advertisements were signed “a Hong Kong citizen Li Ka-shing”.

Ten weeks of confrontations between police and protesters have plunged Hong Kong into its worst crisis since it reverted from British to Chinese rule in 1997, and have presented the biggest popular challenge to Chinese President Xi Jingping since he came to power in 2012.

China has likened the increasingly violent protests to terrorism and warned it could use force to quell them, as U.S. President Donald Trump urged Mr. Xi meet protesters to defuse the tension.

 

More mass demonstrations are expected through the weekend. Police tactics against protesters have been hardening and Mr. Li (91), warned that “the best cause can lead to the worst results”.

More than 700 people have been arrested since the protests began in June, and tear gas has been frequently used by police in attempts to disperse protests across the city.

A rally called “Stand with Hong Kong, Power to the People” is planned in the central business district on Friday night. That event has permission from authorities but police have banned other protests planned for the weekend.

A march planned for Sunday by the Civil Human Rights Front, which organised the million-strong marches in June, has only been allowed an assembly in Victoria Park on Hong Kong island because of safety concerns.

The group is appealing against the police decision.

Another march planned in Kowloon's Hung Hom district on Saturday has also been banned.

Mr. Li, who formerly chaired CK Hutchison Holdings, did not make any reference to supporting the government or its embattled leader Carrie Lam in the advertisements, which encouraged freedom, tolerance and the rule of law.

However, a statement issued later by a spokesman quoted Mr. Li as saying said investing in the future would always bear fruit for Hong Kong.

“The young always fear the future has nothing to do with them,” Mr. Li's statement said. “I think the government heard the messages from the protesters loud and clear and is diligently racking their brains now for solutions.”

Many businesses, including other major property developers, that have publicly backed Lam's administration and the city's police force.

Research firm Capital Economics warned on Thursday the protests could push Hong Kong into a recession, with a risk of capital flight. Hong Kong's property market, one of the world's most expensive, would be particularly hard hit, it said.

Ms. Lam sought in a Facebook post late on Thursday to clear up what she said was a misunderstanding about parts of a speech last week.

She had referred to protesters as having no stake in Hong Kong's society in comments that provoked a backlash and fuelled further unrest. However, Lam said she meant to say “we all have a stake in Hong Kong”.

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