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Kin Cheung / AP

Three Hong Kong protest leaders to surrender to police

Occupy Central founders turn to community organizing; student leaders vow hunger strike to press for democracy

Three of the founders of Hong Kong's protest movement on Tuesday called for an end to street demonstrations to prevent further violence and to take the campaign for democratic reforms to a new stage.

It wasn't clear whether student protesters, who make up the bulk of the activists, would heed the call.

Professors Benny Tai Yiu-ting and Chan Kin-man and Pastor Chu Yiu-ming said they plan to surrender to police on Wednesday to take responsibility for protests that have shut down parts of the Asian financial center for more than two months.

Instead of street protests, the three hope to continue the campaign through networking among civic groups, as well as community organizing and education in democracy and human rights.

The three are founders of the Occupy Central movement, which is pushing China's central government to scrap its requirement that candidates for the semiautonomous region's leader be approved by a panel chosen by Beijing. However, they represent only one faction of demonstrators, most of whom are students.

Joshua Wong, a prominent student leader, said Monday that he and two other members of his group would go on an indefinite hunger strike to press their demands.

"We admit that it's difficult in the future to have an escalated action, so besides suffering from batons and tear gas, we would like to use our bodies to direct public attention to the issue," he said Tuesday. "We are not sure if the hunger strike can put pressure on the government, but we hope that when the public realizes the student hunger strike, they will ask themselves what they can do next."

In the early, dark hours of Monday, police armed with pepper spray, batons and riot shields clashed with activists carrying umbrellas — a symbol of their movement — as authorities moved to clear them out of an area in front of the government complex where activists had been camped out.

The compound was forced to shut temporarily and the city's leader, who is backed by Beijing, said public patience was wearing thin, adding that police would "continue to take decisive action to enforce the law."

In a statement read to reporters, Tai, Chan and Chu said their surrender would also serve as a "silent denunciation of a heartless government."

"Tomorrow's battleground is expansive, and now is the time to transform the people's strength into a sustainable civil society movement, to sow the spirit of democracy deep into the community," they said in the statement.

Tai said it wasn't clear whether police would send them home or detain them for inciting the protests, which the Hong Kong and Chinese governments have denounced as illegal.

While the trio's call to end the protests threatens to fracture the movement, Tai denied they were abandoning the demonstrators.

"We just urge the occupiers to consider the importance to understand that the fight for democracy is a long battle," he said.

The Associated Press

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