
A protest at the British consulate General in Hong Kong. ©REUTERS / Athit Perawongmetha
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A protest at the British consulate General in Hong Kong. ©REUTERS / Athit Perawongmetha
Activists flocked to the UK Consulate in Hong Kong on Sunday, waving Union Jacks and singing âGod Save the Queenâ in a bid to convince London to step in and protect them from Beijing like it would have in the colonial era.
The hundreds of protesters who gathered in front of the British Consulate-General claim the Chinese government is encroaching on their freedoms established under the âone country, two systemsâ formula at the end of British colonial rule in 1984. Calling on the former sovereign to do something about it, they waved British flags as well as those of colonial Hong Kong, and sang patriotic British songs, including âGod Save the Queenâ and âLand of Hope and Gloryâ.
RELATED CONTENT: Hong Kong: Make Colonialism Great again
Britain had control over Hong Kong for decades after taking it from imperial China â a result of the Opium Wars, which reduced what was an economic powerhouse to destitution.
God Save the Queen sung outside the British Consulate-General at Sunday’s protest calling for the UK to take action to assist Hong Kong protesters.
In full: https://t.co/kmLJLFCnSX. #hongkong #hongkongprotests #antiELAB pic.twitter.com/kISGIz46RB
â Hong Kong Free Press (@HongKongFP) September 15, 2019
Since itâs highly unlikely that modern Britain would launch a colonial war the way it did so often in the 19th century, the protesters have other ideas on how Her Majesty can support them. For example, granting full British citizenship to holders of the British National (Overseas) passport â a special type of document that was granted to hundreds of thousands of Hong Kong residents. It allows visa-free travel to the UK, but only for six months, and does not include work privileges.
RELATED CONTENT: China Supports Venezuelaâs Sovereignty Against Foreign Intervention
Some protesters were eager to pledge allegiance to Britain, chanting: âWe are British and we will never surrenderâ and âRule, Britannia!â
âWe are British and we will never surrender…We British will never never never be slaveâ. Protesters also sing the Land of Hope and Glory. #HongKong #HongKongProtrst #BritishConsulate #Admiralty pic.twitter.com/huHU3q8i5e
â Katy Wong (@katywmw) September 15, 2019
Itâs not the first time the Hong Kong protesters have urged a foreign power to intervene on their behalf. Demonstrators have also been seen waving American flags, singing the US national anthem, and holding up meme-like photos of a rifle-toting Donald Trump standing on top of a âTrumpâ tank, urging him to âliberate Hong Kong.â
The protests started in March over a now-scrapped extradition bill â which activists claimed was meant to undermine the cityâs judiciary and to persecute dissidents â and have continued with ever-increasing demands from the protest leaders. Some demonstrations turned violent, leading to clashes with police, but Beijing has so far been reluctant to intervene with force.
Beijing accuses the US and UK of spurring the protests, and the demonstratorsâ ostentatious gestures of loyalty to those very nations â like Sundayâs anthem-singing â hardly allay those perceptions.
Featured image: A protest at the British consulate General in Hong Kong. ©REUTERS / Athit Perawongmetha