Deccan Chronicle

HK protester shot in chest in clash

15 protesters hospitalis­ed in police firing

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Hong Kong, Oct. 1: A Hong Kong police officer shot a protester in the chest with a live round on Tuesday after his unit was attacked by demonstrat­ors during sustained clashes in the city, a police source said.

“An officer discharged his firearm after coming under attack and a protester was struck in the chest in Tsuen Wan district today,” the source said, requesting anonymity.

The wounded protester received initial first aid from officers before paramedics arrived, the source said, adding the victim was then taken to Princess Margaret Hospital.

A Hospital Authority spokeswoma­n said that 15 people had been admitted to hospitals across the city following Tuesday’s clashes, one of whom was in a critical condition at Princess Margaret. She would not confirm if the critical patient was the man who had been shot.

Two videos posted online showed the shooting and its aftermath, which took place in Tsuen Wan, a district where hardcore protesters had clashed with police throughout the afternoon.

Some half a dozen riot police can be seen clashing with around 12 masked protesters, some of whom were using umbrellas and metal poles to strike the officers. One officer runs into frame with his sidearm drawn.

A second video, filmed by Hong Kong University’s Campus TV, showed the same incident from a different angle.

Footage filmed shortly afterwards by local broadcaste­r Stand News showed police officers treating the prone man who had an oxygen mask on his face and his t-shirt cut open, traces of blood on his chest.

Paramedics later arrived on scene and placed the man, who was conscious, on to a stretcher.

Meanwhile, the United Kingdom criticised police action in Hong Kong, warning that the use of live rounds could heighten long-running tensions.

In the morning, a crowd of some 50 people waved flags and chanted “Long live the motherland!”. “We are Chinese and the whole nation is celebratin­g,” Kitty Chan, 30, told AFP.

Hong Kong's protests were initially sparked by a now scrapped plan to allow extraditio­ns to the mainland.

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