Demonstranter vill få G20 att agera mot Kina. (TYRONE SIU / TT NYHETSBYRÅN)

Demonstranter uppmanar G20 att agera mot Kina

Under onsdagen samlades demonstranter i Hongkong för att få länderna i G20 att agera mot Kina. Detta med anledning av det lagförslag som vållat protester i Hongkong de senaste veckorna och som skulle göra att brottsmisstänkta Hongkong-bor utlämnas till Kina.

Samtidigt säger Kina att de inte kommer diskutera protesterna under mötet i Japan på fredagen. Trump har å sin sida sagt att han planerar att ta upp det med Kinas president Xi Jinping, rapporterar AFP.

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Protesterna mot utlämningsförslaget i Hongkong
Wikipedia (en)
The 2019 Hong Kong anti-extradition bill protests are a series of ongoing demonstrations in Hong Kong and other cities around the world against the Fugitive Offenders and Mutual Legal Assistance in Criminal Matters Legislation (Amendment) Bill 2019 proposed by the Hong Kong government. Concerns are raised over the removal of the firewall of the legal systems between Hong Kong and Mainland China where Hong Kong citizens and foreign nationals passing through the city could fall victim to the Chinese legal system where the courts are under political control. The movement gained momentum when the April 28 demonstration attracted an estimated 130,000 protesters.After the chaos in the Legislative Council meetings and the curtailment of the usual procedure of scrutinising the bill, as well as the concerns raised by foreign business groups, politicians and governments in May, the June 9 protest calling for the withdrawal of the bill and resignation of Chief Executive Carrie Lam was attended by over a million people, a record breaking turnout as the organisers claimed. Similar protests were also launched in cities such as New York City, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Toronto, Vancouver, London, Berlin, Frankfurt, Tokyo, Sydney and Taipei. On 12 June, the day the government attempted to table the bill for second reading, the protest outside of the government headquarters descended into violent clashes, where the police fired tear gas, beanbag rounds and rubber bullets indiscriminately at largely peaceful protesters and declared it as a "riot". The government's action sparked controversy over the police use of excessive force. On 16 June, according to claims by the organizers of the protest, a historic record of nearly two million people turned out in demonstration against the extradition bill as well as the police brutality, a day after Chief Executive Carrie Lam announced a pause in the passage of the extradition bill.
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