Hong
Kong's Pro-Democracy Lawmakers
Make Historic China Trip
By
Heda Bayron
HONG KONG
(VOA) -- The pro-democracy bloc of Hong Kong's elected lawmakers
has been allowed back onto the Chinese mainland for the first time since
the
1989 massacre in Beijing's Tiananmen Square. The group joined its legislative
colleagues in talks with senior Chinese Communist Party officials, but
the meeting underscored the vast gap that exists between the democrats
and Chinese officials.
The two-day
trip to neighboring Guangdong province Sunday by 59 of Hong
Kong's 60 elected legislators produced an unprecedented
exchange of candid views between
Chinese Communist Party officials and their critics in Hong Kong.
During a
meeting with Guangdong's Communist Party chief, Zhang Dejiang,
some outspoken lawmakers raised the issue of democracy in China.
They also called for a reversal of China's stand on the 1989
Tiananmen massacre, in which hundreds and possibly thousands
of pro-democracy protesters died.
China has
always insisted the crackdown was necessary to protect national
stability, a position Mr. Zhang, a member of the party's governing
Politburo, repeated during the meeting. Mr. Zhang cut off Hong
Kong lawmakers who tried to debate the subject further, saying
there was no point in discussing the issue if the two sides
disagreed.
The meeting
disappointed some lawmakers. Others acknowledged that the gap
between the two sides could not be narrowed by a single visit.
Lawmaker Lee Cheuk-yan, who was among those who debated Mr.
Zhang on the Tiananmen issue, says he hopes the two sides can
build trust over time.
"We
are here to express ourselves, and I think they [Chinese officials]
understand our viewpoint, so that mutual understanding can
develop," he said.
Hong
Kong Chief Executive Donald Tsang, who arranged the visit,
says
it was "a
good start" that could lead to further discussions. The official China
Daily newspaper called it a "historic" visit.
Some of the
lawmakers participating in the trip had been barred from entering
the mainland and branded as traitors since criticizing Beijing's
actions in the 1989 incident.
Political
analysts say the trip is a political gesture by Beijing to
try to win the opposition over. In 2003 and 2004, the central
government was rattled by mass protests, in which the pro-democracy
coalition played a major role, demanding direct elections in
Hong Kong.
Currently,
a committee of pro-Beijing appointees selects the chief executive,
and only half of the members of the legislature are elected
by direct public vote.
Hong Kong's
government has been discussing proposed reforms to how the
territory elects its leader and lawmakers. The details of the
plan have not been made public, but Beijing, which has effective
veto power over Hong Kong decisions, has already ruled out
direct elections by 2007, when Chief Executive Tsang's term
expires.
Hong Kong
returned to Chinese sovereignty in 1997. The principle of universal
suffrage is enshrined in the former British colony's mini-constitution,
but the document is vague on the timing.