Furious pro-democracy lawmakers forced Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam to suspend her annual policy address in Parliament on Wednesday.
She had to halt her initial attempts to deliver the address as they shouted "five demands, not one less," referencing to the list of requests by protesters.
However, Lam appeared unapologetic about her government's response to the protests during her policy statement.
"Any acts that advocate Hong Kong’s independence and threaten the country’s sovereignty, security and development interests will not be tolerated," she said.
"Despite the stormy times and overwhelming difficulties Hong Kong is experiencing, I believe that so long as we accurately adhere to the principle of 'one country, two systems', we will be able to get out of the impasse."
Lam later told a news conference that she had held "closed-door" meetings with some members of the protest movement and that more talks were planned once the unrest ended.
Afghanistan and Pakistan will hold peace talks in Doha on Saturday, both sides said, after the South Asia neighbours extended a ceasefire following a week of fierce border clashes.
Britain's Prince Andrew said on Friday he would give up using his title of Duke of York following years of criticism about his behaviour and connections to the late US convicted financier Jeffrey Epstein.
Chen Ning Yang, one of the world's most renowned physicists and a Nobel Prize winner, died at 103 of illness in Beijing on October 18, state news outlet Xinhua said on Saturday.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy came to the White House on Friday looking for weapons to keep fighting his country's war with Russia, but met an American president who appears more intent on brokering a peace deal than upgrading Ukraine's arsenal.