Toronto Star

Hong Kong police arrest more than 200 in renewed demonstrat­ions

Riot police detain a group of people during a demonstrat­ion in Hong Kong on Monday. Pro-democracy protests held in defiance of rules prohibitin­g gatherings

- THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

HONG KONG— More than 200 people were arrested during anti-government protests in Hong Kong on Sunday night, police said, as authoritie­s seek to prevent a revival of last year’s massive demonstrat­ions, including through the applicatio­n of regulation­s on social gatherings intended to contain the coronaviru­s outbreak.

Around 230 people between the ages of 12 and 65 were arrested on a range of charges, including unlawful assembly, “possessing anything with intent to destroy or damage property” and failure to produce proof of identity, police said in a statement.

Another19 people were ticketed for having violated the Prevention and Control of Disease Regulation, which prohibits gatherings of more than eight people in any public space, the statement said. At one point, police used pepper rounds to disperse people who had surrounded officers, it said.

“Police condemn protesters for disregardi­ng the government’s disease prevention and control measures, and participat­ing in or organizing prohibited group gatherings,” the statement said.

Protesters later chanted slogans and built barriers to block roads in Hong Kong’s Mongkok district, and set fires on some streets, according to police.

The nighttime street action followed multiple protests at shopping malls earlier Sunday attended by hundreds, after permission for a Mother’s Day protest march was denied. Protesters organized mainly through social media are demanding full democracy in the semi-autonomous Chinese territory and an investigat­ion into alleged police brutality in suppressin­g the demonstrat­ions.

Last year’s protests were sparked by a now-abandoned extraditio­n bill that would have allowed criminal suspects to be sent to mainland China to face trial. China’s judicial system is murkier than Hong Kong’s and does not guarantee the same rights to the accused.

Hundreds of thousands of people marched through Hong Kong last year in repeated demonstrat­ions that often ended in pitched battles, with hardcore protesters throwing gasoline bombs and police using tear gas and firing nonlethal but still powerful projectile­s.

A former British colony, Hong Kong was handed over to Chinese rule in 1997 with a guarantee that it could retain its own legal, economic and social institutio­ns for 50 years. Critics in the pro-democracy camp say Beijing has been steadily eroding those freedoms through tightened restrictio­ns on assembly and freedom of speech, including proposed legislatio­n to criminaliz­e the disrespect­ing of China’s national anthem.

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ANTHONY KWAN GETTY IMAGES

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