More than half a million Hong Kong people voted in primaries held by pro-democracy parties to choose candidates for upcoming legislative elections, organisers said yesterday.
The high turnout for the unofficial poll came despite a government warning that it could be in breach of a tough new security law imposed on the city by Beijing.
Tens of thousands queued in the intense summer heat at more than 250 polling stations across the city for the two-day vote which opened hours after police raided an opinion pollster helping to conduct the primaries. After polls closed at 9pm yesterday, organisers said more than 580,000 people had cast their ballots in the digital voting system.
“Under the cloud of the national security law, nearly 600,000 people came out and voted - this is where we can see the courage of Hong Kong people,” former legislator and organiser Au Nok-hin said.
The winning candidates are expected to be announced today evening after all the votes are tallied and be endorsed to run for seats in the city’s 70-member legislature in September.
On Thursday, constitutional and mainland affairs minister Erick Tsang warned that those “organising, planning and participating” in the primary might commit offences of succession, subversion and colluding with foreign forces under the new security law, according to interviews given to a select few pro-Beijing newspapers.
Despite the warning, hundreds of thousands flocked to cast their ballots. “I really love Hong Kong,” Au said. “Hong Kong people have again created a miracle and again told the world that our pro-democratic camp can attract so many to vote.”
Beijing imposed the security law on Hong Kong last week targeting acts of subversion, secession, terrorism and foreign collusion with a maximum penalty of life imprisonment, in response to huge and often violent democracy protests that erupted last year.
Similar national security laws are used to crush dissent on the mainland and police in Hong Kong have already arrested people voicing certain political views now deemed illegal, such as advocating independence or greater autonomy.
Police late Friday night raided the office of Public Opinion Research Institute (PORI), a prominent opinion pollster that was helping the pro-democracy camp to conduct the primary. Police claimed they were responding to a report that PORI computers had been hacked, resulting in an unlawful leak of personal information. The raid raised concerns over the primary but PORI president Robert Chung said the voting system was safe and its operation was legal and transparent.
A pro-Beijing activist (left) hurls insults at Roy Tam Hoi-pong and his volunteer during a campaign for the primary election aimed at selecting democracy candidates for the September election, in Hong Kong.