HK protests subside as exhaustion sets in

Tiredness is beginning to show for the few hundred pro-democracy protesters who remain on Hong Kong's streets after a week of demonstrations.

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The statue "Umbrella Man" by the Hong Kong artist known as Milk, is set up at a pro-democracy protest site next to the central government offices in Hong Kong on October 5, 2014. Pro-democracy demonstrators stood divided Sunday over whether to withdraw from protest sites across Hong Kong, hours before a government deadline to clear key roads they have blockaded for the last week. (AAP)

Exhausted Hong Kong demonstrators are debating the next step in their pro-democracy campaign as their numbers dwindled and the city returned to work after a chaotic week of mass protests.

The government had been forced to shut its headquarters on Friday due to the ranks of protesters blocking the access roads, leaving 3000 civil servants at home.

On Monday a knot of protesters kept the entrance to the complex partially blocked with barricades, but opened a narrow section to allow workers to enter.

"I'm happy the protesters opened the barriers today," one female civil servant said as she pushed through. "I need to work!"

In fear of a repeat of ugly scenes a week ago when police unleashed tear gas on the crowds, only a committed core of about a thousand had waged a vigil through the night.

After a public holiday on Wednesday and Thursday, for many in the city Monday was their first day back at work.

With some buses still diverted due to roads occupied by the protesters, highways were gridlocked with traffic and subway trains were packed as frustrated commuters tried to find a different route to work.

"They have to let the cars through as soon as possible - they are blocking the way," said Michael Lau, 25, who rides the tram to work.

Secondary schools in the affected areas also reopened on Monday as the city administration pushed for Hong Kong to get back to normal.

While relieved that they had not been cleared away by police ahead of the government's Monday deadline to abandon the protest sites, tiredness was beginning to show for the few hundred who remained.

"It's good that nothing (no police action) happened but... I hoped that something would happen so we could end this thing quickly," said 18-year-old Otto Ng Chun-lung, a pro-democracy protester and sociology student.

"This is my opinion - because everyone is just exhausted and we can't go long, long, long time."

But some of those on the streets have vowed to stay and others have promised to return later in the day, insisting their campaign was not losing steam after the week-long standoff that has at times erupted into violence.

The protesters are demanding the right to nominate who can run for election as the former British colony's next leader in 2017.

China's Communist authorities insist only pre-approved candidates will be able to run, a system activists dismiss as "fake democracy".

Handed back to Chinese rule in 1997, Hong Kong is governed under a "one countries, two systems" deal that guarantees civil liberties not seen on the mainland, including freedom of speech and the right to protest.

But tensions have been rising over fears that these freedoms are being eroded, as well as rocketing inequality in the Asian financial hub.


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