People queue up at a polling station on the last day to vote for an unofficial referendum on democratic reform in Hong Kong. More than half a million Hong Kongers have voted on democratic reform in the specially administered Chinese city that Beijing has
Hong Kong:
An informal referendum aimed at bolstering support for greater democracy in Hong Kong wound down Sunday after drawing nearly 800,000 votes and the ire of Beijing, which denounced it as a political farce.
Hong Kongers used the straw poll to express their desire for greater say in choosing their leader.
The vote is part of a campaign by activists in the southern Chinese city to ratchet up the pressure on authorities for democratic reform that could ultimately lead to a mass protest paralyzing the city's financial district.
Hong Kong, a freewheeling capitalist enclave of 7.2 million, passed from British to Chinese control in 1997 with the promise that it could retain a high degree of control over its own affairs under the principle of "one country, two systems."
Beijing has pledged to allow Hong Kongers to elect their next leader in 2017, but is balking at letting them nominate candidates. China's communist leaders instead insist all candidates must be vetted by a Beijing-friendly committee, like the one that has handpicked the city's leaders since British rule ended.
Rising public discontent over mainland China's increasing influence has fuelled yearning for full democracy in Hong Kong, where residents can only vote for 40 of 70 lawmakers as well as local councilors.
In what was seen as a thinly veiled threat ahead of the 10-day poll, Beijing released a policy document that said, among other things, that Hong Kong's autonomy comes at the discretion of the central government. The paper sparked a backlash, with more than 800 lawyers protesting Friday over a requirement for judges to be patriotic to China.
Beijing has slammed the poll by organizers of the Occupy Central for Love and Peace movement as illegal, and the state-run Global Times newspaper blasted it as "mincing ludicrousness."
About 790,000 ballots had been cast by Sunday evening, mostly online or through a smartphone app, although 62,000 were cast at polling stations.
Voters had a choice of three proposals on democratic reform, all of which included so-called public nomination.
Occupy Central organizers have vowed to rally 10,000 people in a mass protest aimed at crippling the central business district if the government fails to come up with reform proposals that don't meet international standards.
The plan has alarmed businesses, which have been drawing up contingency plans. On Friday, four major auditing firms took out an ad in a local newspaper to express their concern over the planned protest.
Hong Kongers used the straw poll to express their desire for greater say in choosing their leader.
The vote is part of a campaign by activists in the southern Chinese city to ratchet up the pressure on authorities for democratic reform that could ultimately lead to a mass protest paralyzing the city's financial district.
Hong Kong, a freewheeling capitalist enclave of 7.2 million, passed from British to Chinese control in 1997 with the promise that it could retain a high degree of control over its own affairs under the principle of "one country, two systems."
Beijing has pledged to allow Hong Kongers to elect their next leader in 2017, but is balking at letting them nominate candidates. China's communist leaders instead insist all candidates must be vetted by a Beijing-friendly committee, like the one that has handpicked the city's leaders since British rule ended.
Rising public discontent over mainland China's increasing influence has fuelled yearning for full democracy in Hong Kong, where residents can only vote for 40 of 70 lawmakers as well as local councilors.
In what was seen as a thinly veiled threat ahead of the 10-day poll, Beijing released a policy document that said, among other things, that Hong Kong's autonomy comes at the discretion of the central government. The paper sparked a backlash, with more than 800 lawyers protesting Friday over a requirement for judges to be patriotic to China.
Beijing has slammed the poll by organizers of the Occupy Central for Love and Peace movement as illegal, and the state-run Global Times newspaper blasted it as "mincing ludicrousness."
About 790,000 ballots had been cast by Sunday evening, mostly online or through a smartphone app, although 62,000 were cast at polling stations.
Voters had a choice of three proposals on democratic reform, all of which included so-called public nomination.
Occupy Central organizers have vowed to rally 10,000 people in a mass protest aimed at crippling the central business district if the government fails to come up with reform proposals that don't meet international standards.
The plan has alarmed businesses, which have been drawing up contingency plans. On Friday, four major auditing firms took out an ad in a local newspaper to express their concern over the planned protest.
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