Leung Chun-ying

Leung Chun-ying, also known as CY Leung, is the chief executive of Hong Kong. He was born in 1954 and assumed office on July 1, 2012. During the controversial 2012 chief executive election, underdog Leung unexpectedly beat Henry Tang, the early favourite to win, after Tang was discredited in a scandal over an illegal structure at his home.

NewsHong Kong

Anti-CY protesters explain why they took to the streets

What drives people to forgo a day off to march for or against the chief executive? Their reasons, it appears, range from the personal to high politics

Wednesday, 02 January, 2013, 10:03am

Poll

  • Yes: 74%
  • No: 26%
2 Jan 2013
  • Yes
  • No

They came from across the city, carrying different banners and with a wide range of concerns. About the only thing that united them was a wish to see Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying ousted, just six months into the job.

For some, the reasons for marching were deeply personal. For others, the march was about wider concerns and the future direction of Hong Kong.

One 70-year-old who identified herself as "Sister Fong" said she was marching for the benefit of the next generation.

CY supporters on why they chose to protest

Fong, who lives with her daughter, said she felt Leung was not doing anything to improve elderly welfare, despite his claims to be putting livelihood issues first.

"I lost a tooth but I didn't have money to get an implant. If the government would give us HK$3,000 a month, I would be happy," she said as she joined other supporters of the Alliance for Universal Pensions. Her daughter earns about HK$10,000 a month but Fong said she did not want to rely on her.

"Everything is getting more expensive nowadays," she said. "She can barely make ends meet for herself."

For about 100 villagers from Fanling North, Kwu Tung North, Ta Kwu Ling and Ping Che, the issue was plans for massive new towns in the northeastern New Territories that would see their rural homes razed to make way for high-rise housing.

A Mr Leung, 40, said he had lived in Ma Shi Po village since childhood. He makes a living by farming and does not want to move into a flat.

"There will be much less space, and conflicts might arise," he said, adding that he only learned of the plan a year ago and that the government had not given villagers enough time to express their views.

Gay-rights groups marched under a rainbow banner, calling for anti-discrimination laws to protect homosexuals.

Salesman Aniel So, 18, said they had already waited for too long for laws to protect their rights. "We are now only asking the most basic right, laws to protect us from discrimination," he said.

National education was on the mind of May Chan, a 36-year-old housewife, who urged the government not to bring back the subject, which was shelved last year after massive protests and accusations that it represented "brainwashing".

"I need it to say clearly that it will not push forward the curriculum again," said Chan, who marched with her six-year-old son. "If it does not promise, it will introduce the curriculum again some time later."

Queenie Chow, 46, said she was unhappy about how the government had dealt with a dispute over the funding of the troubled Digital Broadcasting Corporation. "The government didn't help at all. That's a sign that freedom of speech is shrinking," she said.

Two groups marched under the colonial Hong Kong flag. Form Two student James Lau joined the anti-mainland group "We are Hongkongers, not Chinese", and said he hoped Hong Kong could return to its former glory, free of interference from Beijing.

He decided to protest with the British Hong Kong flag because he saw it as a reminder of better times. "Hong Kong local culture has been eroded and destroyed by the mainland," he said. "This needs to change. The number of mainland people coming down needs to stop."

The Hong Kong Autonomy Movement, another anti-mainland group, raised the colonial flag in Lee Garden Road, Causeway Bay.

Spokesman Vincent Lau said it was calling on four top government officials - Leung, Chief Secretary Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor, development chief Paul Chan Mo-po and education minister Eddie Ng Hak-kim - to resign for poor performances.

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pslhk
The limitations of some readers' Form 2 outlook and naive record interpretation ability show. Some graduates nowadays are F3 equivalent of the 70’s, but louder and more opinionated than professors; navel gazers who can’t see HK and themselves in a larger context.
I have no time to educate simple-minded F2-like readers who should learn and think more about corruption and HK’s housing problems before voicing their misunderstandings.
Camel
I dare to say that 90% of the protestors and participants of the anti government marches even don't know the details of all accusations made towards the CE and even worse, do not know the past of HK and how it was. If you analyze all comments they made, you always find flaws of the base in their accusation. From half true to totally incorrect. Who is paying them and who put such things into their minds?
yellow_lynx_cat
So that your 50 cents ?
Camel
Form 2?
spunkyjj
A Form-2 student can read. Records show that Hong Kong largely eradicated corruption and established a professional civil service during the Colonial era. Under the British rule, Hong Kong also established a public housing program that provided shelter and the dignity of having a home to more than half of Hong Kong's population and is continuing to do so today. Hong Kong people were far more optimistic and self-confident before 1997 when the world looked on Hong Kong as a miracle city, one of the four dragons of Asia. Isn't it natural that a Form-2 student look at that part of Hong Kong's history with awe and longing? The best way to gain respect and trust from young people is to show them that you are good and you are fair. You can never force respect from young people by bashing them. We should know that because we were all young once.
Byebye
Who is brainwashing who? It looked like the present vulnerable circumstances of the Government have given rise to situation like, 混水摸魚 - to fish in troubled water; are some people trying to take advantage of the crisis for personal gain or advancement?......or 走火入魔 - our mind is distorted to an extent that evil has penetrated into our system? Please think carefully about the future of Hong Kong.
Laisee.com.hk
How does a Form two student remember better times? Who has been brainwashing him?
sungsdc
"Bad News Sells" - that's the reason most News Media takes the easy route to survive in business today. However, news media should spend the effort to maintain its own core value - unbaised reporting and not the sensational ones.
As a middle class, we have worked hard for ourselves and Hong Kong for years. It is sad to see the mentality of "free lunch for all". That's not the core value of Hong Kong. We earn our living and not the "hand-me-down" and expect the government to feed us. With the free lunch mentality, we will end up like the PIIGS with zero incentive to make a living ! Let's get the government to distribute and exhaust all the current reserves which at least I can get some of my shares before it disappears into free-for-all benefits. Hong Kong can then start to collect tax from everyone rather than the current tax payers - less than 15% of the population! Only then we can talk about more social welfares programme like universal retirement as everyone will have to pay for their shares. All the young people would have to bear all the cost of old age welfare by then as Hong Kong will have 30% retirees in less than 20 years.
bbanson
With all due respect to the western infidels - their politicians who have bold faced lied like CY, and caught with their pants down, would have resigned long before (excepting Slick Willie Clinton). Its not about he messed up, & he has fessed up, and therefore business as usual afterwards. CY’s total lack of principal, as shown in his conflict of interest (& amnesia afterwards) in the Kowloon Cultural Foster Architects affair, and his blatant attack against Tang (another Beijing annointee) on the illegal structures (where he was just as complicit & guilty),showed in no uncertain terms the man is total devoid in integrity, and a thorough hypocrite to boot. To just sit back and actually believe his deviousness, and inherent dishonesty, will stand Hong Kong in good stead is wishful thinking. Bring on the protests. If Beijing is total tone deaf, and instead insists on propping up a failed persona, then Hong Kongers are truly in doo doo.

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