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Hong Kong and Taiwan lawmakers deny colluding over political independence at conference besieged by protests

Desire for democracy and social justice stressed at event after Beijing warns that any move to go it alone is ‘destined to fail’

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Making their voices heard (from left) are Nathan Law, Edward Yiu, Joshua Wong, Eddie Chu and NPP lawmakers. Photo: Samuel Chan

Lawmakers from Hong Kong and Taiwan said their common ground was a desire for democracy and social justice, not “collusion for political independence” as Beijing had suggested.

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Hong Kong lawmakers Nathan Law Kwun-chung, Edward Yiu Chung-yim, Eddie Chu Hoi-dick and three legislators from Taiwan’s New Power Party made the appeal at a conference in Taipei on Sunday.

It came after a spokesman from China’s Taiwan Affairs Office on December 28 described the two-day event as “an attempt made by Taiwan’s independence forces to collude with Hong Kong’s independence advocates”, and that such actions were “destined to fail” and those involved would get “their heads broken and covered with blood”.

The conference was besieged by pro-China protesters who at times turned violent. And upon arriving in Taiwan on Saturday, student activist leader Joshua Wong Chi-fung was almost assaulted at the airport. He was hurried to a waiting vehicle by police officers.

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