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It’s not too late to shape Beijing’s mind on reform, liaison office tells pan-democrats

Central government's top representative says no decision has been made and pan-democrats can still influence NPC Standing Committee ruling

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(From left) liaison office chief Zhang Xiaoming and host Chief Secretary Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor at the meeting in the government's Tamar offices yesterday with lawmakers Frederick Fung, Dr Joseph Lee Kok-long, Ip Kin-yuen and Charles Mok, and Undersecretary for Constitutional and Mainland Affairs Lau Kong-wah. Photo: Nora Tam

Beijing's top man in Hong Kong told pan-democrats their meetings with central government representatives had not come too late to shape its decision on the city's political reform, a lawmaker said yesterday.

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Liaison office chief Zhang Xiaoming said Beijing valued pan-democrats' opinions, which he would convey "truthfully", according to Frederick Fung Kin-kee of the Association for Democracy and People's Livelihood.

Zhang has said the nomination process cannot be completely open
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Lawmakers told Zhang that genuine universal suffrage was not incompatible with national security and would enhance Hongkongers' sense of belonging to the country, said Fung.

Yesterday's 110-minute meeting at the government's offices in Admiralty - attended by four pan-democrats - was the second of four being held ahead of a meeting of the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress next week.

"Suggestions have been made that the meetings with pan-democrats have come too late and would be meaningless. Zhang disagreed with this view," Fung said. "Zhang said Beijing officials would attach great importance to what [pan-democrats] tell them in the four meetings with him and the seminar in Shenzhen this Thursday."

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All 70 lawmakers have been invited to the Thursday meeting and 49 have so far agreed to attend, including "Long Hair" Leung Kwok-hung of the radical League of Social Democrats.

"It can't be said that a decision has been made," a source quoted Zhang as saying.

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