HK parents protest education plan

Demonstrators pushing children in prams marching during a protest against the government's efforts to implement national education in Hong Kong yesterday.Picture: AFP

Monday, July 30, 2012

THOUSANDS of stroller-pushing Hong Kong parents and activists yesterday protested a plan to introduce national education lessons, slamming it as a bid to brainwash children with Chinese propaganda.

The government plan has sparked a public outcry, with a teachers union branding it "political interference" from the mainland.

Police said 19,000 demonstrators took part in the noisy protest, which was led by parents and young students. The organisers have yet to release their own estimates.

"As a parent, I'm very angry, this is a blatant brainwashing," mother-of-three Sandra Wong said as she marched in the sweltering heat accompanied by her husband and pushing her two-year-old daughter in a stroller.

"The curriculum only paints a rosy picture about the Communist Party... This is just an attempt to introduce the mainland agenda in Hong Kong schools," she said.

Under the proposal students would take 50 hours of lessons a year focusing on "building national harmony, identity and unity among individuals", according to the government.

The government has rejected criticisms and said it will push ahead with the plan, with government-run primary schools expected to start introducing the subject in September. It is due to become compulsory in 2015.

Officials have said the subject is important to foster a sense of national pride and belonging, amid rising anti-Beijing sentiment 15 years after the former British colony was returned to Chinese rule.

AFP



Feel free to comment on this article using your Facebook account. By submitting your comment, you agree to the Terms and Conditions for the use of this comments feature, as stated here.