Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam announced Tuesday that legislation to allow suspects to be sent to mainland China to face trial had failed after weeks of massive protests.
The proposed bill sparked some of the largest demonstrations in the city’s history, with as many as 2 million of Hong Kong’s 7 million residents taking to the streets.
Denying that her government had ever called the protesters “rioters,” Lam, speaking through an interpreter in a nationally televised address, took “full responsibility for what happened.”
Switching to English, in which she is fluent, Lam said, “The bill is dead.”
She said it wouldn’t be revived.
Lam promised to listen more closely to the Hong Kong people, saying she hoped that “this will extend to other officials of the Hong Kong government.”
But, she refused to accept calls for amnesty for any protesters who broke the law, calling alleged acts of violence and vandalism during the demonstrations “not acceptable.”
Hong Kong became a special administrative region of China in 1997. Many residents have expressed fear that their rights are being eroded under Beijing’s rule.
The legislation that sparked the recent protests would have amended a bill to simplify case-by-case arrangements to allow extradition to jurisdictions beyond the 20 with which Hong Kong already has extradition treaties. Among the proposed new jurisdictions were mainland China and Taiwan.
Opponents questioned the fairness and transparency of the Chinese court system and warned that Chinese security forces could trump up charges against political opponents.
Protests on Sunday were calmer in comparison, with organizers estimating that more than 230,000 people took part.