Stabroek News

Hong Kong students’ sewer escape thwarted

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HONG KONG, (Reuters) - Some antigovern­ment protesters trapped inside a Hong Kong university yesterday tried to flee through the sewers, where one student said she saw snakes, but firemen prevented further escape bids by blocking a manhole into the system.

Reuters witnesses said fewer than 100 protesters remained inside the Polytechni­c University, surrounded 24 hours a day by riot police, after more than 1,000 were arrested beginning late on Monday.

Some surrendere­d while others were held during escape attempts that included trying to clamber down ropes to waiting motorbikes on Monday night, with protesters throwing petrol bombs and police responding with tear gas, rubber bullets and water cannon.

“I told my mom when the police started storming that I wasn’t leaving. I told her: ‘I want a democratic society and you are not willing to stand up and fight for it’,” Jack, 21, an accounting and finance student, said on Wednesday.

“She wrote back with a crying emoji,” he said. “My parents just keep saying they love me, and to keep healthy.”

The streets were quiet on Tuesday and Wednesday.

Protesters, wearing waterproof boots and carrying torches, resurfaced inside the campus after unsuccessf­ully probing the sewers - where fast-rising water levels are also a hazard - for a way out during the night.

Police said six people were arrested on Wednesday - four while removing a manhole cover outside the campus and two climbing out.

Firefighte­rs, whom the students let on to the campus, were in place to stop any further attempts, blocking the only feasible entrance into the sewer system in an undergroun­d car park on campus.

“The sewer was very smelly, with many cockroache­s, many snakes. Every step was very, very painful,” said Bowie, 21, a student at Hong Kong University who was forced to turn back.

“I’d never thought that one day I would need to hide in a sewer or escape through sewers to survive.”

The university on the Kowloon peninsula is the last of five that protesters had occupied to use as bases from which to disrupt the city over the past 10 days, blocking the central Cross-Harbour Tunnel and other arteries.

“This mission is a loss,” said Brutus, 21, who became a protest frontliner in August. He and his girlfriend were taking a break to eat an orange, a Snickers bar and hard-boiled eggs in one of the classrooms.

“After all of the things that happened, I don’t think protesters taking control of the universiti­es was a good option. We don’t have gear like the police. We are not wellorgani­sed like the police.”

Brutus said he also felt bad about damage to the university. Breaking the CCTV cameras was fine, he said, because that was about protecting people. But other damage was wrong – especially to the library.

“We are here to learn. Now we can’t pass those books to the students coming in next year. That is a great loss.”

He and his girlfriend left to look for a way to escape.

Police said nearly 800 people had left the campus peacefully by late on Tuesday and they would be investigat­ed, including nearly 300 under the age of 18. At least 24 were seen walking out on Wednesday.

Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam has called for a humane end to a siege that saw the most intense clashes since the protests escalated more than five months ago.

Police said they had no plans to storm the campus, now wrecked and daubed with graffiti, parts of it stinking of petrol used to make Molotov cocktails and rotten food, with broken glass everywhere.

“Ideas are bulletproo­f,” was spraypaint­ed in a few places.

Demonstrat­ors are angry at what they see as Chinese meddling in freedoms promised to Hong Kong when the then British colony returned to Chinese rule in 1997. They say they are responding to excessive use of force by police.

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