China Daily (Hong Kong)

Tse: Rumors of police collusion are of little logic

- By JOSEPH LI in Hong Kong joseph@chinadaily­hk.com

The vice-head of the city’s police watchdog debunked rumors that have emerged from the prolonged social unrest since June, including the often-cited multiple deaths of protesters at the Prince Edward MTR station on Aug 31, and the allegation of police collusion in the Yuen Long incident of July 21.

Tony Tse Wai-chuen, vice-chairman of the Independen­t Police Complaints Council, found the rumors of “little logic” and said the rumors have misled people, leading to “a wrong conclusion”.

“If people had died, their families and friends would have come out. However, the protesters could not provide any evidence, not even the names, sex, age, etc, of the people ‘killed’. In a busy city like Hong Kong, it would be very difficult to cover up deaths in the station as it would need the collusion of many department­s and institutio­ns,” said Tse, who also is a member of the Legislativ­e Council.

Tse was responding to rumors that police murdered six people during the Aug 31 incident, which the police watchdog report found to be an “extraordin­ary claim” as no evidence whatsoever was provided. The report noted that passengers were at the scene, yet none of them reported people being killed or injured so seriously that they would die.

Also unfounded is the allegation that police colluded with triads, which stemmed from a brief exchange of words between a police officer and a man wearing a white T-shirt, and the officer’s patting the man’s shoulder, he said.

Tse hopes the report will set the truth straight, and provide the facts to enable members of the public to judge the accusation­s in a more rational and informed manner.

In the face of a slew of fake informatio­n surroundin­g the often-violent protests, Tse said providing a fact-based account of the prolonged protests is very important.

“We have to spend lots of time to look into fact or the material informatio­n we gather to ensure this informatio­n and their sources,” Tse said.

Among the 52 recommenda­tions the watchdog made to the city’s law enforcemen­t, it has advised police to enhance communicat­ions with the public to avoid unnecessar­y, unfounded or malicious speculatio­n and rumors. These suggestion­s include measures to enhance the transparen­cy of the police’s work and its publicity and public education on its procedures and practices to ease public concerns and quash speculatio­n and rumors.

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