Windsor Star

Christmas ‘doesn’t matter’ to protesters

- DONNY KWOK AND MARI SAITO

HONG KONG MARCH

HONG KONG • Anti-government protesters marched through Christmas-decorated shopping centres in Hong Kong on Wednesday, chanting pro-democracy slogans and forcing one mall to close early, as police fired tear gas to disperse crowds gathering on nearby streets.

The protests have turned more confrontat­ional over the festive season, though earlier in December they had been largely peaceful after pro-democracy candidates overwhelmi­ngly won district council elections.

Despite the embarrass

ing results, Hong Kong’s

pro-beijing leaders have made no new concession­s.

“Confrontat­ion is ex

pected, it doesn’t matter if it’s Christmas,” said Chan, a

28-year-old restaurant worker who was part of a crowd that exchanged insults with police outside a shopping centre in the Mong Kok district.

“I’m disappoint­ed the government still didn’t respond

to any of our ... demands. We continue to come out even if

we don’t have much hope,”

said Chan, who only gave his surname.

Riot police patrolled several neighbourh­oods while tourists and shoppers, many wearing Santa hats or reindeer antlers, strolled past.

There were no major clashes, but with impromptu crowds forming to shout expletives at the unpopular officers, who have been accused of using excessive force, police briefly fired tear gas in Mong Kok, a popular protest area.

Police describe their reaction to the unrest as restrained.

Hundreds of protesters, dressed in black and wearing face masks, descended on shopping malls around the Chinese-ruled city, shouting popular slogans such as “Liberate Hong Kong! Revolution of our times!”

Police arrested several people in a shopping mall in the SHA Tin district after pepper-spraying them. The mall closed early. Baton-wielding police also fired tear gas on Tuesday at thousands of protesters who barricaded roads and trashed a Starbucks café and an HSBC branch.

The city’s leader, Carrie

Lam, said in a Facebook post on Wednesday that many Hong Kongers and tourists were disappoint­ed that their “Christmas Eve celebratio­ns have been ruined.”

The Hospital Authority said 25 people had been injured overnight, including one man who fell from the second to first floor of a shopping mall as he tried to escape the police.

HSBC has become embroiled in a controvers­y involving a recent police crackdown on a fundraisin­g platform supporting protesters. HSBC denied any connection between the crackdown and its closure of an account linked to the group.

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