Police to maintain law, order during district council election: HK official
HONG KONG -- A senior official of China's Hong Kong Special Administrative Region government said on Saturday that the presence of the police at polling stations for the district council election on Sunday is important to deter interference and maintain law and order.
"We must ensure that there is enough police present to deter any interference and also to really maintain law and order, to maintain safety of the polling staff as well as the electors and the candidates," said Chief Secretary for Administration Matthew Cheung in response to a question about the upcoming election.
Cheung said the patrol of police will encourage people to feel a sense of security that police are around to protect them when they go out to cast their votes, instead of deterring any people.
"We are determined and committed to holding an orderly, peaceful, fair and honest election tomorrow," Cheung said, appealing to all members of the public to cooperate and to protect the election.
He also stressed the significance of the election, saying that it is the first time that every single seat is contested.
In the district council election scheduled for Sunday, 1,090 validly-nominated candidates will compete for 452 seats in 18 districts. More than 600 polling stations will be open for about 4.13 million registered voters.
- China to strengthen legal framework in economic, anti-corruption, and emerging sectors
- Shanghai hospital unveils AI model for women's health
- China aims to boost seed industry for self-reliance and food security, says minister
- NPC deputy calls draft ethnic unity law a 'foundational guide' for Xinjiang's cultural workers
- China's public security continues to improve in 2025
- World's oldest articulated bony fish fossil unearthed in Chongqing































