One Month After Tear Gas, Hong Kong Protesters Ponder Their Next Step

Tuesday evening in front of Hong Kongs Central Government Complex seemed at first glance like any other in recent memory, with pro-democracy protesters milling around the tent-filled section of highway they have christened Umbrella Square.

But it was on this day exactly one month ago that police used tear gas on thousands of citizens demanding the right to elect their own leader without interference from Beijing.

And this memory remains fresh in peoples minds.

It was a sad day because of what the police did, said 24-year-old Alan Yip, who was on the front lines on Sept. 28 and has been camping out in the ritzy Admiralty district for the past 20 days. Many people suffered.

Tuesdays commemoration, attended by thousands, was filled with symbolism and perfectly orchestrated. At exactly 5:57 p.m., the time the first tear gas was deployed, protesters opened a sea of umbrellas and observed 87 seconds of silence for the 87 canisters fired. Many donned goggles and face masks as they had during the onslaught.

There was a huge cheer as the silence ended, and a long yellow banner was unfurled reading I want real universal suffrage. As music began to play and a screen off to the side showed scenes of that tumult, plus everything that has happened since, many protesters wept anew as they reflected on their ongoing struggle for democracy.

The achievement weve had is totally unexpected, Benny Tai, co-founder of the civil-disobedience movement now being called Occupy Hong Kong, tells TIME. A new era has started.

Tai also urged the protesters to consider the relationship between the Umbrella Movement a name derived from the protesters use of umbrellas as shields against police pepper spray and Hong Kongs three-decade-long history of democratic movements. How can we see the Umbrella Movement beyond Umbrella Square? he asks.

Oct. 21 talks between Hong Kong officials and student leaders yielded little progress, and on Tuesday the students asked for a meeting with Chinas Premier Li Keqiang, according to Bloomberg.

For protesters like Dominic Lee, though, the immediate future looks somewhat bleak. Its a bit of getting nowhere, he said. You can see the government didnt respond, they didnt change anything.

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One Month After Tear Gas, Hong Kong Protesters Ponder Their Next Step

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