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Protesters rallying outside government headquarters before Chief Executive C Y Leung’s announcement. Photo: RTHK. |
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The Chief Executive, C Y Leung, has dropped plans to force schools to teach “moral and national education”, and to make it an independent subject.
He announced that instead schools would have freedom to decide whether to introduce the subject as part of other courses, such as civic education.
Mr Leung also said he would not have included the issue in his election manifesto if it had not been a policy of the previous government.
The climb-down follows nearly twoweeks of protests against thecontroversial subject outsidethe government headquarters in Admiralty.
The original plan was to introducenational education in allprimary schools over the next three years, and in all schools by 2016.
But Mr Leung said there would now be no such deadline.
Asked why he had made this sudden change one day ahead of the Legislative Council elections, the Chief Executive rejected suggestions that he had receivedinstructions from the centralgovernment.
He also reiterated a denial that introducing the subject toschools was a politicaltask given to him by Beijing.
Mr Leung said the policy wassomething that he and his government had inherited.
“It’s not something of our making”, he continued.
“And as soon as we realised that there were opposing and different views in the community, I myself and my team have dealt very quickly with the issue.” Mr Leung called on opponents of national education to stop their protest, hunger strikes and plans to boycott classes.
The organisers of the protest against national education said more than 100,000 people gathered outside the government headquarters this evening.
The Civil Alliance against National Education welcomed the decision to drop the school deadline.
But a spokeswman, Linda Wong, said there were still concerns, since responsibility was being placed on individual schools, which could put them in a difficult position.
She added that opponents of the subject had demanded that the controversial curriculum guide be abandoned, but the government had offered only a review.
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