Hong Kong election chief urges public to vote on Sunday
Published in Political News
Hong Kong’s election chief has urged the public to vote in Sunday’s legislative election after some called for it to be postponed in the wake of the city’s deadliest fire in decades, RTHK reported.
Appearing on the broadcaster on Saturday, David Lok, head of the Electoral Affairs Commission, said the date of Hong Kong’s election couldn’t be easily changed and that it was important to avoid a “vacuum period” in the legislature.
Lok said it was in the city’s interest to proceed as the newly elected lawmakers could help drive reforms needed to prevent disasters like the fire at a building complex that left at least 159 people dead.
In the aftermath of the blaze at Wang Fuk Court on Nov. 26 — the city’s deadliest fire in nearly eight decades — the government suspended election campaigning for about a week.
“At this difficult time voters should approach their civic responsibilities with more seriousness” and get out to cast their ballots, RTHK reported Lok as saying. “Only this will fulfill the overall interest of Hong Kong.”
The election chief added that the elections weren’t draining resources from the government’s disaster relief work.
Sunday will see the city’s 4 million eligible voters choose 90 Legislative Council members from 161 government-vetted candidates, who will serve four-year terms. The last elections held in 2021 — the first to be held under an electoral overhaul imposed by Beijing — saw record-low turnout.
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