Record Voter Turnout in Key Hong Kong Election
Record Voter Turnout in Key Hong Kong Election
A record 2.2 million people voted in key Hong Kong elections which ended in the early hours on Monday and saw young independence activists calling for a complete break from China for the first time.

Hong Kong: A record 2.2 million people voted in key Hong Kong elections which ended in the early hours on Monday and saw young independence activists calling for a complete break from China for the first time.

Early indications showed some candidates advocating a break with Beijing are likely to become lawmakers.

The city-wide vote was the biggest since mass pro-democracy protests in 2014 and saw candidates fighting for seats in the Legislative Council (LegCo), as concerns grow that Beijing is tightening its grip on the semi-autonomous city.

At some polling stations there were snaking queues until until 2:30 am local time -- four hours later than the scheduled cut-off time -- with a turnout of almost 60 per cent of 3.7 million voters.

That compares with 53 per cent in the last LegCo elections in 2012.

"There was a record-breaking amount of people casting their ballots this year," Electoral Affairs Commission chairman Barnabus Fung told reporters.

Counting got under way after 3:00 am, and results as of 5:30 am showed victories for some young "localist" activists who are pushing for more distance or complete independence from Beijing.

Former student leader of the 2014 "Umbrella Revolution" rallies, Nathan Law, whose new party Demosisto wants a referendum for Hong Kongers on whether they should stay part of China, is also likely to take a seat, according to early counting.

But most established pro-democracy politicians do not support the notion of independence and may lose seats to voters who now favour more radical new groups.

If the democrats lose just four seats overall, they will forfeit the one-third voting bloc they need to veto bills, stacking the already skewed legislature even more in favour of Beijing.

It is almost impossible for the democracy camp to take a majority in LegCo as 30 of its 70 seats are elected by special interest groups representing a range of businesses and social sectors. Those seats go predominantly to pro-Beijing candidates.

Only 40 seats are directly elected by the public.

Rolling results so far show long-established lawmakers from both the pro-democracy camp and the pro-Beijing camp have been re-elected.

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