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  • China's President Xi Jinping has made the restoration

  • of his country's power and dignity

  • the central theme of his presidency.

  • But Hong Kong, a part of China's sovereign territory,

  • has descended into violent anarchy.

  • Universities have turned into battlegrounds.

  • Protesters are hurling Molotov cocktails at the police.

  • But they appear to retain a strong measure of support

  • from the population.

  • Chinese troops have appeared on the streets,

  • but so far only to help clear the roads.

  • The spark for the first demonstrations in June

  • was the introduction of a bill allowing

  • extradition of criminal suspects from Hong

  • Kong to mainland China.

  • By most accounts, that was an idea

  • pushed by Carrie Lam, Hong Kong's chief executive.

  • But Mr Xi bears a broader responsibility.

  • In the seven years since he came to power in Beijing

  • the Chinese state has become significantly more

  • authoritarian.

  • Preparing the ground in Hong Kong for a backlash

  • against rule from Beijing.

  • An anti-corruption drive has seen prominent figures

  • disappear from public life on the mainland

  • and a rash of suicides among Communist party officials.

  • And more than 1m people have been

  • interned in re-education camps in the province of Xinjiang.

  • The treatment of Xinjiang is often

  • cited by demonstrators in Hong Kong

  • as a sign of just how far Beijing

  • will go to crush cultural and regional diversity.

  • During the Xi period, the mainland's intolerance

  • for free speech and thuggish attitude towards the law

  • has seeped into Hong Kong itself.

  • The case of some Hong Kong booksellers,

  • who were kidnapped, then detained on the mainland

  • sent a chilling message.

  • So did the decision to ban elected lawmakers

  • from the Hong Kong assembly for mangling

  • loyalty oaths to China.

  • Prominent anti-Beijing political activists,

  • such as Joshua Wong and Edward Leung, were imprisoned.

  • Mr Wong is now out of jail while the still imprisoned Mr Leung

  • finds his slogan "Free Hong Kong, Revolution Now,"

  • chanted on the streets.

  • During the Xi years China's gone backwards politically.

  • Maoist era slogans have been revived

  • and Xi Jinping thought has been written

  • into the Chinese constitution.

  • Free speech has been further restricted.

  • Civil rights lawyers have been locked up.

  • And non-governmental organisations have been closed

  • down.

  • So it's hardly surprising if Hong Kong now

  • regards the prospect of full integration

  • with the mainland with horror.

  • And that date no longer seems impossibly far off.

  • The most radical demonstrators are often

  • in their teens or early 20s and they'll

  • be in the prime of their lives when the second handover takes

  • place in 2047.

  • The current revolt raises questions,

  • not just about Mr Xi's handling of Hong Kong,

  • but about his entire political project.

  • The president's mantra is the great rejuvenation

  • of the Chinese people.

  • And central to that is the restoration

  • of national territorial integrity.

  • Just as disturbingly for Mr Xi's vision,

  • the rebellion in Hong Kong undermines a central tenet

  • of the patriotic education pushed by the Communist party.

  • Namely, that there is one China and that

  • all Chinese people long for nothing more than to be united.

  • It's now clear that millions of Hong Kongers

  • do not feel that ethnic solidarity overrides

  • their political concerns about mainland China.

  • On the contrary, they're increasingly

  • asserting a separate Hong Kong identity

  • that's often tinged with prejudice against mainlanders.

China's President Xi Jinping has made the restoration

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