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Hong Kong to End Year With Multiple Protests, Kick off 2020 With Big March

US Will ‘Take Action’ If North Korea Tests Missiles, Official Says

A White House official has said Washington will “take action” if Pyongyang tests a long-range missile or nuclear missile, adding that the United States would be “extraordinarily disappointed” if it took place. The United States has “a lot of tools” in their toolkit to deal with North Korea, White House national security adviser Robert O’Brien said in an Dec. 29 interview with ABC News. Washington was concerned over Pyongyang’s recent threats of a “Christmas gift” he said, noting that they are still monitoring the situation closely. “We will reserve judgment but the United States will take action, as we do in these situations,” O’Brien said. “If Kim Jong-un takes that approach, we will be extraordinarily disappointed and we will demonstrate that disappointment.” In early December, Pyongyang threatened the United States with a possible “Christmas…

Hong Kong to End Year With Multiple Protests, Kick off 2020 With Big March

HONG KONG—Hong Kong will end 2019 with multiple protests planned for New Year’s Eve and New Year’s Day, which has seen a rise in clashes between police and protesters since Christmas.

Events dubbed “Suck the Eve” and “Shop With You” are set for New Year’s Eve on Dec. 31 in areas including the party district of Lan Kwai Fong, the picturesque Victoria Harbour, and popular shopping malls, according to notices on social media.

A pro-democracy march on Jan. 1 has been given police permission and will start from a large park in bustling Causeway Bay and end in the central business district.

Organizers Civil Human Rights Front were behind the peaceful million-plus marches in June and held a mass protest earlier in December, which they said around 800,000 people attended.

“On New Year’s Day, we need to show our solidarity … to resist the government. We hope Hong Kong people will come onto the streets for Hong Kong’s future,” said Jimmy Sham, a leader of the group.

The protests began in June in response to a now-withdrawn bill that would have allowed extraditions to mainland China, where courts are controlled by the Communist Party, and have evolved into a broader pro-democracy movement.

Police said they would deploy crowd control patrols on Tuesday and urged marchers on Wednesday to remain peaceful.

Hong Kong to End Year With Multiple Protests, Kick off 2020 With Big March Pro-democracy demonstrators take part in a protest in Edinburgh Place in Hong Kong, China on Dec. 29, 2019. (Lucy Nicholson/Reuters)

In a Facebook post, Police Commissioner Chris Tang thanked his frontline officers for guarding Hong Kong’s “safety and stability” and issued a warning to protesters.

“If you use violence, you will not get public support. We, police, will do all we can to arrest you,” Tang said.

The demonstrations planned for New Year follow a pick up in clashes since Christmas Eve, when riot police fired tear gas at thousands of protesters following scuffles in shopping malls and in a prime tourist district.

While the protests—now in their seventh month—have lessened in intensity and size in recent weeks, marches or rallies continue to occur almost daily.

Hundreds of people gathered in the central district on Monday night to remember people that have been killed or injured during the protests.

More than 2,000 protesters have been injured since June.

While there is no official count of deaths, student Chow Tsz-lok died after a high fall during a pro-democracy rally in November. Multiple suicides have been linked to the movement.

“For most Hong Kong people, Christmas and New Year’s don’t mean anything to us anymore,” said Roger Mak, a 35-year old who attended Monday’s rally.

“What we’re fighting for is our future,” he said, adding that he planned to attend both protests scheduled this week.

Police arrested 34 over the weekend and used pepper spray to break up a gathering aimed at disrupting retail business near the border with mainland China.

More than 6,000 protesters have been arrested since challenges began to the extradition bill, seen as an example of meddling by Beijing in freedoms promised to the special administrative region when Britain returned Hong Kong to China in 1997.

The protests have battered Hong Kong’s economy, already reeling from the fallout of the U.S.-China trade war. Trade figures on Monday showed exports falling 1.4 percent year-on-year in November and imports dropping 5.8 percent, with both set for a clean sweep of negative monthly figures in 2019.

Paul Chan, the city’s financial secretary, said on Sunday that a fall in GDP in the fourth quarter was “unavoidable.”

To alleviate the “pain” of the economic downturn, he said the government’s budget in February would focus on boosting the economy, protecting unemployment and easing the “plight” of the people and enterprises.

By Clare Jim and Xihao Jiang

This article is from the Internet:Hong Kong to End Year With Multiple Protests, Kick off 2020 With Big March

Federal Judge Plans to Block North Carolina Voter ID Law

A federal judge is preparing to grant the NAACP’s request to block a North Carolina law requiring that voters use photo identification to prove who they are before voting in elections. With 15 electoral votes, North Carolina was a key battleground state in the 2016 presidential election, and there’s every indication that it will retain that status in the 2020 election. Republican Donald Trump won 49.8 percent of the popular vote in the state in 2016, compared to the 46.2 percent won by Democrat Hillary Clinton. The injunction in the case cited as NAACP v. Cooper will be issued against S.B. 824, now known as Session Law 2018-144, which the General Assembly approved Dec. 5, 2018. There’s at least one other lawsuit that’s currently pending in challenge to the law.…