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Hong Kong protest leaders plan trip to Beijing to try to meet Chinese leaders

WATCH ABOVE: Hong Kong student leaders plan to fly to Beijing on Saturday to try to meet with China’s top officials.

Hong Kong student leaders plan to fly to Beijing Saturday to try to meet China’s top officials to press their case for a greater say in choosing the territory’s next leader.

Eason Chung, a member of a student group that played a main role in organizing street protests that started nearly two months ago, said Friday that he and two others had bought plane tickets for the trip.

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If they are allowed to enter mainland China, they will go straight to China’s legislature to seek talks with Premier Li Keqiang and other officials.

The students have already asked the Hong Kong government’s No. 2 official as well as former leader Tung Chee-hwa to arrange a meeting but their requests have been rebuffed.

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“When those bridges between the Hong Kong government and Beijing rejected all our demands, we think they are not doing their due responsibility, so we’ll go ourselves,” said Chung, a member of the Hong Kong Federation of Students.

Federation leader Alex Chow and two deputies, Chung and Nathan Law, are scheduled to depart the former British colony for the Chinese capital on a Cathay Pacific flight at 5 p.m. Saturday.

They had previously considered going to Beijing during a major summit of Pacific Rim leaders that ended Wednesday but decided against it.

The protesters have been occupying streets in three business and shopping districts to oppose Beijing’s decision that a panel screen candidates for the territory’s inaugural 2017 elections.

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