Hong Kong (CNN) -- A week into paralyzing
pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong, authorities and demonstrators are
still at loggerheads as a government deadline to clear the streets
approaches.
Both sides say they are open to talks, but each wants concessions from the other.
A student group said
Sunday that it would restart dialogue with the government if police do a
better job of handling clashes between pro-democracy protesters and
people opposed to the demonstrations.
The protesters, many of
them students, have blocked major highways in several key districts for
the past week, challenging a decision by Beijing about how elections
will work in the semiautonomous Chinese territory.
Hong Kong's top leader,
Chief Executive C.Y. Leung, has called on the demonstrators to disperse
by Monday so that classes can resume at schools and government employees
can go back to work at offices surrounded by protesters.
In a statement, the Hong
Kong Federation of Students said the Hong Kong government had sent
representatives to contact its group, bearing the message that it wished
to discuss the possible terms for a dialogue. The two sides had agreed
on a meeting to discuss the format of future talks.
Addressing crowds at the
protests, the federation's secretary general, Alex Chow, repeatedly
called on protesters to "add oil" -- a phrase meaning "keep it up" -- as
he urged the movement to continue.
Confusion
There was confusion early
evening as to whether protesters would leave two major protest
locations to consolidate their efforts at the main demonstration site in
the city's Admiralty district.
The protest group Occupy
Central with Love and Peace said on its Twitter account that
demonstrators had decided to withdraw from outside the chief executive's
office, a key point of tension with authorities.
But after the tweet was sent, crowd numbers at the site grew rapidly, according to CNN staff present, with protesters yelling that it was false information that they were leaving.
Occupy Central also said
that demonstrators at the Mong Kok protest site, where clashes have
taken place with opponents of the movement, would relocate to the main
protest site on a multilane highway near the government headquarters in
Admiralty.
But other protesters did not want to comply with Occupy's announcement. They sat on the ground, and barricades were not moved.
Gary Yuen, 30, who has
been at the Mong Kok site since the protests started, told CNN that less
than 20 people had relocated to Admiralty.
"Today there are lots of supporters," he said. "You can see we all want to stay."
Clashes in busy area
Dozens of people were
injured as scuffles broke out Friday and Saturday at the protest site in
Mong Kok, a tightly packed district of shops and residences surrounding
one of the city's busiest intersections.
Students and other
protesters have accused police of failing to protect them from attacks
by people who want an end to the demonstrations.
Police have rejected the
accusations, calling them "totally unfounded and extremely unfair to
police officers who faithfully and diligently performed their duty at
the scene."
At least 30 people have
been arrested since Friday, police said, adding that at least eight were
believed to have links to organized crime groups, known as triads.
Hong Kong government
figures showed that 165 people -- 120 male and 45 female -- had been
injured since protests started last week.
Human Rights Watch
issued a statement calling on Leung to "urgently assure the public of
their rights to peaceful assembly and expression" ahead of his deadline
to clear the streets.
"C.Y. Leung needs to act
urgently or confidence in the Hong Kong government's commitment to
human rights and the rule of law will be deeply compromised," said
Sophie Richardson, China director at Human Rights Watch.
Access to government building in dispute
The protesters broke off planned talks with Leung's second-in-command, Chief Secretary Carrie Lam, because of the violence.
"The precondition for
opening the dialogue between students and the government is that police
should properly handle the clashes between pro-occupation protesters and
opposing citizens," the Hong Kong Federation of Students said in a
statement Sunday.
"If the second point is confirmed, students are willing to re-open dialogue with the government right away," the statement said.
The students disputed the government's assertion that government workers can't access the headquarters.
"The passage to the
government headquarters has always been kept open, the 3000 civil
servants can enter into the building," the student federation said. "The
Administration's Office can ask the employees to return to their
workplace, the government should not continue to confuse and mislead
people."
The government issued its own statement saying "the door to dialogue is always open" if the students are willing.
It also said it hoped the protesters would open up a footbridge and several roads around the government building.
University official urges protesters to leave
A senior official at one
of the city's top universities called on students to leave the protest
areas immediately, saying he feared for their well-being.
"I am making this appeal
from my heart because I genuinely believe that if you stay, there is a
risk to your safety," Peter Mathieson, president and vice-chancellor of
Hong Kong University, said in a message to students early Sunday.
"Please leave now: you owe it to your loved ones to put your safety
above all other considerations."
Demonstrators are upset
with a decision this summer by China's ruling Communist Party to let a
committee stacked with Beijing loyalists choose who can run as a
candidate for the chief executive role in the 2017 election.
A new electoral system
will, for the first time, let the city's 5 million eligible voters pick a
winner rather than the largely pro-Beijing committee of 1,200 members
that has chosen past leaders. But critics argue that the right to vote
is pointless if the candidates are handpicked by Beijing.
They complain the
Chinese government is encroaching too heavily on the affairs of Hong
Kong, which has been governed according to the "one country, two
systems" policy since Britain handed it back to China in 1997.
Support for the protest
swelled last Sunday, when police used tear gas and pepper spray in a
failed effort to disperse demonstrators. The use of such heavy-handed
tactics shocked many residents in Hong Kong, where protests usually
unfold peacefully.
The Chinese and Hong
Kong governments have declared the demonstrations illegal. Beijing has
heavily restricted the flow of information on the Chinese mainland about
the protest movement.
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