China Blasts US And EU Consulates Over June 4 Candles

"); jQuery("#212 h3").html("

Related News Programmes

"); });

2021-06-05 HKT 11:58

Share this story

facebook

  • Scores of candles were seen lit in the windows of the US consulate building on Friday night. Photo: AFP

    Scores of candles were seen lit in the windows of the US consulate building on Friday night. Photo: AFP

China on Saturday berated the US and EU consulates in Hong Kong for displaying candles to commemorate the June 4 Tiananmen crackdown, slamming it as a "clumsy political show" to destabilise the city.

Candles were seen lit in the windows of the US consulate building, which is next to the residence of Hong Kong's Beijing-appointed leader Carrie Lam, and the European Union's office on Friday night.

The missions also posted photographs of their candlelit Tiananmen memorials on social media.

"Any attempt to exploit Hong Kong to carry out infiltration or sabotage activities against the mainland crosses the red line ... is absolutely intolerable," a spokesperson for the Hong Kong office of China's foreign ministry said.

"We again urge the organs of relevant countries in Hong Kong to immediately ... stop meddling with Hong Kong affairs and China's internal affairs at large, and avoid playing with fire."

For three decades in Hong Kong, huge crowds, often tens of thousands strong, have held candlelit vigils on June 4 for those killed in 1989 when tanks and troops crushed pro-democracy protests in Beijing.

Crowds have swelled in recent years as Hong Kongers chafe under Beijing's increasingly assertive rule.

However this year's vigil was banned at a time when Hong Kong authorities are carrying out a sweeping clampdown on dissent following huge and often violent democracy protests two years ago.

Flashes of defiance still flickered across the city on Friday night as residents simultaneously turned their mobile phone lights or lit candles in multiple districts across the city to mark the date.

There were online calls for people to turn off the lights at home and place candles in their windows in commemoration.

Public commemorations of June 4 are forbidden in mainland China and, until recently, semi-autonomous Hong Kong was the one place in China where large scale remembrance was still tolerated. (AFP)

RECENT NEWS

SUNMI Technology Is Officially Listed On The Main Board Of HKEX

SUNMI Technology Group Co., Ltd, a Business IoT (BIoT) leader, was officially listed on the Main Board of the Hong Kong... Read more

Can AI-Native Infrastructure Finally Eliminate The Friction Within Cross-Border Payments?

What is stopping businesses from fully tapping a US$336 billion cross-border payments opportunity? Ask the merchants tr... Read more

HKMA Cargox Pilot Brings 21 Banks To Boost SME Trade Finance Via Data Sharing

The Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) has launched the HKMA Cargox pilot programme, partnering with 21 banks to digit... Read more

Krakens Parent Acquires Reap In US$600M Deal To Expand Stablecoin Payments In Asia

Payward, the parent company of cryptocurrency exchange Kraken, is acquiring Hong Kong-based payments infrastructure fir... Read more

XTransfer Files For Hong Kong IPO, Seeking US$186 Million

Chinese B2B cross-border payments company XTransfer has filed for an IPO in Hong Kong to raise US$186 million. The comp... Read more

HSBC Rolls Out Privé World Legend Mastercard To Hong Kong Clients

HSBC Hong Kong has launched the HSBC Privé World Legend Mastercard, becoming the first bank in the Asia Pacific region... Read more