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AP/Press Association Images

Hong Kong's leader to protesters: 'I will not resign'

He held a press conference just minutes before a midnight deadline set by protesters demanding his resignation expired.

HONG KONG’S EMBATTLED leader today rejected protesters’ calls for him to resign, but in a significant concession agreed to talks with a students group involved in mass pro-democracy demonstrations that have paralysed parts of the city.

“I will not resign because I have to continue with the work for elections,” Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying told reporters at a press conference just minutes before a midnight deadline set by protesters demanding his resignation expired.

But he said he would agree to talks, appointing Chief Secretary Carrie Lam to lead discussions with the Hong Kong Federation of Students, a prominent group involved in the ongoing demonstrations.

Protesters have two demands — that Leung resign and that Beijing grant free elections in the semi-autonomous city, allowing Hong Kongers to nominate and vote for their own chief executive in leadership polls in 2017.

AP / Press Association Images AP / Press Association Images / Press Association Images

In August, China said Hong Kongers would be able to vote for their next leader but only those vetted by a loyalist committee would be allowed to stand — something demonstrators have dismissed as a “fake democracy”.

Speaking at his residence, a colonial-era building in a district close to where tens of thousands of protesters have besieged the city’s government headquarters, Leung defended his record and his police forces.

AP / Press Association Images AP / Press Association Images / Press Association Images

“All this time the government and the police has used the greatest degree of tolerance to allow them (protesters) to hold different types of assemblies to express their demands and concerns,” he said.

“In any other place in the world, if there are protesters surrounding government buildings… then the problem and the result would be severe,” he added.

- © AFP 2014.

Read: Hong Kong Occupy leader says protests will spread ‘like flowers’>

Opinion: The peaceful anarchy of Hong Kong’s student protesters is infectious>

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    Mute LeeKelly
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    Oct 2nd 2014, 7:01 PM

    Is that not how elections work here? ;)

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    Mute Neal Ireland Hello
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    Oct 2nd 2014, 7:14 PM

    No, we have free elections. It’s just that we’re very bad at voting.

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    Mute Tony Skillington
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    Oct 2nd 2014, 7:26 PM

    Free elections or not…no matter what they do, an Irish politician will never resign

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    Mute Jim bean
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    Oct 2nd 2014, 7:08 PM

    I’d rather resign than be shot quite honestly

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    Mute Mick Jordan
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    Oct 2nd 2014, 7:10 PM

    Well what do you know, America has been stirring shit again, pivot to Asia style, and look at Argentina, they drop the Petrodollar and their president is saying, the Assassins are on the way from up North.

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    Mute Glen
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    Oct 2nd 2014, 7:12 PM

    It’s all about the petrodollar !!

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    Mute Robert Elworthy
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    Oct 2nd 2014, 7:03 PM

    Time to call in hong kong phooey (for those of us old enough to remember)

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    Mute Dublinjonny_No.2
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    Oct 2nd 2014, 8:11 PM

    I’m sure the Chinese could very easily just accept the peoples demands and put who ever get elected in their back pockets anyway. Our masters in the European council are a non elected and for the most case self electing so keep that in mind when we look at other nations political systems regardless of how bizarre they seem to be .

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