Hong Kong protests get Vancouver support
Many in Vancouver crowd have family in Hong Kong
Hundreds of protesters gathered outside the Chinese Consulate in downtown Vancouver to lend their voices to the pro-democracy movement in Hong Kong that has seen hundreds of thousands there take to the streets.
Leo Shin, with the Department of History and Asian Studies at UBC, believes the unrest could have some short-term economic impact here.
The unrest, he says, could also trigger a wave of immigration into Canada and Vancouver. In 1997, Britain handed Hong Kong back to China.
"I'm somewhat pessimistic of what's going on in Hong Kong," he said of hopes for a quick resolution. "I think it would escalate before it becomes better".
In the decades leading up to the transition, political instability led to many Hong Kong residents immigrating to Canada. Shin says many chose to stay here to start a new life, but others returned to Hong Kong.
"Those people are now in their 30s and 40s," says Shin. If the instability continues where to go back to? So Canada would be a natural home for them to return to".