Southern Democratic Alliance | |
Colorcode: |
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Country: | Hong Kong |
Leader1 Title: | Chairman |
Leader1 Name: | James Lung |
Foundation: | 1 February 2004 |
Headquarters: | 1305, 13/F Fu Lee Commercial Bldg. 14-20 Pilkem Street Tsim Sha Tsui, Hong Kong |
Affiliation1 Title: | Regional affiliation |
Affiliation1: | Pan-democracy camp |
Website: | Website |
The Southern Democratic Alliance is a pro-democracy political organization in Hong Kong. The Alliance was founded on February 1, 2004.[1]
Its stated mission is to unite South Asians with local Chinese to build up a colorful Hong Kong. According to the party's chair, James Lung, local media have termed the Alliance the "Rising Sun of South Asians in the city."[2]
Specifically emphasizing the need for stronger anti-discrimination legislation, the Alliance has focused on the desires of South Asians, specifically the Nepalese population in Hong Kong. One ally of the party has been the Nepalese spiritual group Heavenly Path. The two groups cosponsored a peace rally on July 1, 2007, which organizers claim drew more than 100 attendees.[3]
The party's support for peace and reconciliation, including between mainland China and Taiwan, is at odds with official policy. This and other disagreement may have led to the August 4, 2008 closure of e-Wiki, a collaborative wiki website that hosted articles linking party chairman James Lung to the banned Falun Gong movement and which described his criticism of China's Communist Party.[4] More recently, the Alliance has petitioned for the accommodation of English-dominant minority groups in Hong Kong, asking the Subcommittee on Race Discrimination to make English-language job postings available from the labor department.[5]
The Southern Democratic Alliance first fielded candidates in the 2008 Legislative Council elections, in the Kowloon West district. Its nominees were party chairman James Lung and Heavenly Path spiritual leader Sukra Bantawa, an ethnic Nepali.[6] In the September 7, 2008 election, the Alliance received only 591 votes, out of 206,583 cast, or 0.3%.[7]