Millennium Post

Thousands march as HK govt mulls face mask ban

Protesters have used face masks to avoid identifica­tion -- along with yellow helmets, goggles and respirator­s to protect themselves from tear gas and police projectile­s

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HONG KONG: Thousands of masked protesters marched through Hong Kong on Friday as the government readied to use emergency powers to ban face coverings in a bid to put an end to months of vio

lent protests.

Large crowds of mostly office workers hit the streets during the workday lunch break over the pro-beijing regime’s expected use of colonial-era laws that opponents said would tip the city towards authoritar­ianism.

Seething public anger against Chinese rule of the semiautono­mous city has exploded into huge demonstrat­ions and increasing­ly violent confrontat­ions, with no sign of an end to nearly four months of unrest, and activists vowing an 18th consecutiv­e weekend of protests.

Protesters have used face masks to avoid identifica­tion -- along with yellow helmets, goggles and respirator­s to protect themselves from tear gas and police projectile­s.

Multiple local media out

lets reported embattled leader Carrie Lam had decided to turn to the Emergency Ordinance Regulation­s to outlaw face coverings and had met her cabinet on Friday morning.

The government said Lam and senior cabinet ministers would hold a press conference at 3pm (0700 GMT) But protesters have already vowed to defy the law.

“Youngsters are risking their

lives, they don’t mind being jailed for ten years, so wearing masks is not a problem,” a

34-year-old office worker wearing a surgical mask, who gave her first name as Mary, told AFP at a protest on Friday afternoon.

The expected ban comes after Hong Kong was rocked by the worst violence on the year on Tuesday, the same day China celebrated 70 years of Communist Party rule.

Street battles raged for hours between riot police and hardcore protesters while a teenager who was part of a group that attacked police with umbrellas

and poles was shot in the chest with a live round -- the first such shooting since the demonstrat­ions began.

Protesters have increasing­ly resorted to hurling bricks and Molotov cocktails while police are firing tear gas and rubber bullets with unpreceden­ted frequency.

On Friday the city’s subway system said 83 of its 91 undergroun­d stations had been vandalised in recent months after protesters turned on the operator because it began shutting down parts of the network ahead of large protests.

Pro-establishm­ent lawmakers and a prominent police officer associatio­n have ramped up their calls for the government to invoke the emergency laws, which were last used 52 years ago by the British during deadly

leftist riots.

The law allows the city’s

leader to make “any regulation­s whatsoever” in the event of an emergency or public danger without the need to go via the city’s parliament.

During the 1967 riots -- a period where more than 50 people were killed in a year

long leftist bombing and murder spree -- the British used the ERO to give police extra powers of arrest and rolled out widespread censorship of the press.

Government supporters say emergency powers are needed to combat the increased violence of hardcore protesters.

But critics have countered that bypassing the legislatur­e and giving Lam the power to make any law would be a slippery slope for an internatio­nal finance hub that owes its economic success to its reputation for rule of law and judicial independen­ce.

“This is a watershed. This is a Rubicon,” pro-democracy

lawmaker Claudia Mo told AFP. “And I’m worried this could be just a starter. More draconian bans in the name of

law could be lurking around the corner.” It is also not clear how a face mask ban would be enforceabl­e.

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