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Pro-democracy Hong Kong lawmakers defy China in oath taking

Newly elected lawmaker Nathan Law, a student leader, takes oath in the new legislature Council in Hong Kong, Wednesday, Oct. 12, 2016. Newly elected Hong Kong pro-democracy lawmakers have thumbed their noses at Beijing at a swearing-in ceremony to start the legislative session. They displayed flags declaring that Hong Kong is not a part of China and called out for “democratic self-determination” for the semiautonomous Chinese city at Wednesday’s oath taking session. (AP Photo/Kin Cheung)
Original Publication Date October 11, 2016 - 10:55 PM

HONG KONG - A swearing-in ceremony to kick off Hong Kong's legislative session descended into farce Wednesday as newly elected pro-democracy lawmakers intentionally mangled their oaths in a show of defiance against Beijing.

The new crop of lawmakers, elected last month amid swelling anti-China sentiment, object to the oath's requirement to pledge allegiance to the "Hong Kong Special Administrative Region of the People's Republic of China" and its Basic Law constitution.

So they came up with creative ways to get around it.

Sixtus Leung, 30, of the radical Youngspiration party draped a blue flag with the words "Hong Kong is not China" over his shoulders. His colleague Yau Wai-ching laid the same flag out in front of her.

They both vowed to defend the "Hong Kong nation" before reciting the oath in English but mispronouncing China as Shina , an old-fashioned derogatory Japanese term for the country.

Leung clutched a Bible in his right hand but also crossed his fingers. Yau, 25, combined "republic" with a curse word.

They were among three lawmakers whose oaths were not accepted by the legislative clerk.

The provocative actions foreshadow what's expected to be a chaotic term in the semi-democratic Legislative Council after September's elections added to the opposition's numbers in the semiautonomous Chinese city.

The freshman lawmakers represent a new wave of grassroots groups that emerged from the wake of 2014 massive pro-democracy street protests, which failed to win concessions from Beijing but sparked a rising independence movement and a political awakening among the city's young.

Lau Siu-lai, who founded her own party, Democracy Groundwork, took a slow-motion approach. She took about 10 minutes to repeat the declaration, which has less than 100 words, by pausing for several seconds after each one.

Nathan Law, who helped spearhead the 2014 protests and is Hong Kong's youngest ever legislator at age 23, prefaced his oath by quoting Indian independence icon Mahatma Gandhi vowing never to bend to authorities.

"You can chain me. You can torture me. You can even destroy this body but you will never imprison my mind," said Law, of the Demosisto party.

As he recited the oath, he raised his tone slightly when he mentioned the People's Republic of China, in what some saw as a subtle way of turning the statement into a question about whether to bear allegiance.

Not everyone rebelled.

Ann Chiang, one of 40 pro-Beijing representatives in the 70-seat council, raised eyebrows by making her declaration in Mandarin, the language of mainland China, rather than the Cantonese spoken in Hong Kong.

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Follow Kelvin Chan on Twitter at twitter.com/chanman

His work can be found at http://bigstory.ap.org/kelvin-chan

News from © The Associated Press, 2016
The Associated Press

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