With a crucial vote on the southern Chinese financial hub's political future days away, pro-democracy supporters marched to city government headquarters to rally support for a veto of the government's electoral reform package.
At issue is how Hong Kongers will choose their top leader, who's currently hand-picked by a panel of Beijing-friendly elites.
Under the reforms to be put before lawmakers starting Wednesday, the government proposal would allow direct elections for the first time but also require screening of candidates by the panel.
The organisers of the protest, including the Civil Human Rights Front, student groups and pro-democracy political parties, estimated that 3,500 people took part, far less than the 50,000 expected. Police said 3,140 joined.
People marching in the blazing afternoon heat chanted "I want genuine democracy" and "Veto fake universal suffrage." A large yellow banner mounted on a truck read "The citizens against pseudo-universal suffrage campaign."
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei said on Friday that the proposal was "in line with Hong Kong's current circumstances, taking into account the interests of and appeals from different social groups and sectors in Hong Kong.
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