Global Times

Protesters apology not accepted

▶ Move blasted as hypocritic­al, without remorse

- By Chen Qingqing, Wang Wenwen in Shenzhen and Li Ruohan in Beijing

The so-called apology from Hong Kong protesters for brutally injuring a reporter and tourist from the mainland at Hong Kong airport was rejected fiercely by politician­s, scholars and mainlander­s as a hypocritic­al move that showed no signs of remorse.

The illegal and violent behavior at Hong Kong Internatio­nal Airport on Tuesday night sparked wide condemnati­on and criticism from authoritie­s and the public.

Fu Guohao, a reporter from the Global Times website, who was brutally attacked by rioters while performing reporting tasks, is being treated at hospital. Facing the strong backlash, some protesters began posting statements on overseas social media, saying they were sorry and the move was made as they were “too scared.”

Protesters wearing masks held banners at the airport on Wednesday which read “We are desperate and we made imperfect decisions. Please accept our apology,” according to media reports.

The statement was slammed by netizens as a hypocritic­al action to win support from Hong Kong society, which saw an increasing number of people standing up to denounce the violence of radical protesters.

“You mean you are ‘too scared’ so that you confined, hit and insulted the reporter in groups? And now you want to play the victim after you told government officials to die, attacked police with lethal weapons and paralyzed the operation of social organizati­ons,” posted one Sina Weibo user, calling the statement a “masterpiec­e” of hypocrisy.

Shen Yi, a professor at the school of internatio­nal relations and public affairs in Fudan University, Shanghai, said the statement was “more of a hypocritic­al move to redeem the image of the egoist than an apology.”

“Why are the attackers not apologizin­g and why are the so-called apologies written in English and posted on overseas social media, instead of in Chinese, if they are really sorry about the two mainlander­s they attacked and insulted?” Shen said.

The statement only shows their hypocrisy, dishonest and craftiness, said Shen, calling them the “stupid generation.”

“If they are really sorry for their behaviors, they should turn themselves in to the police and take legal responsibi­lity,” said Victor Chan, 33, vice chairman of the Hong Kong Associatio­n of Young Commentato­rs.

Their damage to travelers, the airport and Hong Kong’s internatio­nal image could not be recovered by only a simple apology, said Chan.

Hong Kong is the victim of the rioters’ self-defeating behaviors and it’s time for the Hong Kong government and police to take actions, in addition to pledges, to defend the future of the city, said Shen.

Analysts noted that the apology could not whitewash the fact that the protesters’ extremely violent moves, nor should it earn any leniency from judicial authoritie­s as the motivation is being questioned by many.

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