Civil disobedience movement to launch next month after 'disappointing' reform report
Organisations intend to launch a civil disobedience movement next month after NPC makes its final decision on electoral reform
Watch: Students respond to Carrie Lam's report on universal suffrage for Hong Kong in 2017
The Federation of Students, Scholarism and the Civil Human Rights Front say they will launch a civil disobedience movement next month.
The action will take place after the National People's Congress makes a decision on electoral reform, they said, adding that they would organise a series of demonstrations and protests before that.
The groups said the government's reports on the reform consultation had not reflected Hongkongers' requests for direct nomination of candidates for election as chief executive and had sidelined views expressed in Occupy Central's unofficial referendum last month and on the July 1 march.