HONG KONG - Next week's leadership election
has riveted Hong Kong with all the political rough-and-tumble that is typical
of a thriving democracy. There's only one thing missing - the voters.
Ordinary
Hong Kongers will have no say in who becomes their next chief executive on
March 25. Instead the "election" will be decided by a carefully
selected committee of 1,200 pro-Beijing business and professional elites.
That
detail aside, the main candidates have turned on a political spectacle that
analysts say the former British colony has never seen, one that could offer a
taste of things to come when direct elections arrive, possibly as early as
2017.
"This
is the first real contest between two pro-establishment candidates,"
Chinese University of Hong Kong history professor Willy Lam said.
"It's
very entertaining but at the same time people are quite frustrated because both
candidates have shortcomings, scandals and potential problems."
Henry
Tang, 59, the heir to a textile fortune and the city's former Number Two, was
reportedly Beijing's man and a shoo-in for the job until his campaign veered
dramatically off course almost from day one.
It
started with an emotional public admission of marital infidelity, lurched
through a series of verbal gaffes and blunders, and burst spectacularly into flames
with the discovery of a massive illegal underground entertainment den at his
home, which he blamed on his wife.
His
popularity rankings plunged to a low of 16 per cent.
Tang's
main rival, Leung Chun-ying, 57, is a former government adviser who has
consistently led opinion polls but trails where it matters - in the regard of
Beijing's partners among the city's super-rich tycoons.
Despite
questions over an alleged conflict of interest in a property project a decade
ago, and reports that he dined with triad figures, his promises to boost social
welfare and public housing have proved popular with ordinary citizens who are
angry over the yawning gap between rich and poor.
Beijing
has appeared taken aback by the intensity of the contest. And it has not come
to the rescue of Tang with a public statement of endorsement, which could have
inflamed anti-mainland sentiment.
But
Premier Wen Jiabao set a cat among the pigeons last week when he said he was
confident outgoing chief executive Donald Tsang would be replaced by a leader
who has the support of the "vast majority" of the people.
Political
analysts pored over the premier's comment. Was it a sign that Beijing was
shifting its support to Leung?
If it
was, the city's wealthiest tycoon and Asia's richest man, Li Ka-shing, didn't
get the message. The 83-year-old billionaire broke his silence Friday with a
statement saying Tang "has experience" and his election would be
"good".
Analysts
say Beijing has been embarrassed by the noisy ruckus which has disturbed the
carefully crafted political consensus it has cultivated in the semi-autonomous
territory of seven million people.
"Beijing
felt it has lost face because the two people they have groomed for so long have
failed to stand up to the test," said Lam, referring to both Tang and
Leung, both of whom are seen as establishment figures.
Many
observers also spy greater Chinese issues at play, as the mainland's reformers
led by President Hu Jintao's faction do battle with conservatives in the
Communist Party ahead of a 10-yearly leadership transition.
"Certainly
having someone like Leung in office who would support such reform moves is a
bigger signal to the rest of China," Hong Kong Baptist University
political scientist Michael DeGolyer said.
"That's
why the reformists group is pushing quite hard for Leung."
But
Albert Lai of the pro-democracy Civic Party said that at the end of the day
both Tang and Leung "will be serving the same set of vested
interests".
"They
are appointed by the same set of autocrats - Beijing plus the tycoons," he
said.
The
pro-democracy camp is represented by a third candidate, lawyer and lawmaker
Albert Ho, but analysts say he has no chance of winning the backing of the
electoral committee.
Hong
Kong returned to Chinese rule in 1997 under a system which guarantees a high
degree of autonomy and civil freedoms not seen on the mainland, but which
leaves Beijing in ultimate control.
The
communist central authorities have said that, at the earliest, the city's chief
executive could be directly elected in 2017 and the legislature by 2020.
Denied
a genuine say in the outcome of next Sunday's election, many Hong Kongers are
fed up with the whole thing.
"It's
a fight between two rotten apples," 39-year-old hair stylist Gary Or said.
AFP
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