The Sunday Guardian

Medics join protests against police brutality

- SARAH WU HONG KONG

LONDON: The Barclay family has put the Daily and Sunday Telegraph newspapers up for sale as it assesses its multibilli­on-pound business investment­s in the United Kingdom, The Times reported late on Friday.

Daily Mail and General Trust and the owner of the Evening Standard and The Independen­t newspapers are among potential buyers, the report said. The Spectator magazine, also owned by the Barclays, is not part of the review. The review by Aidan and Howard Barclay, sons of David Barclay, surfaced after the realizatio­n that the family is no longer as united as it once was, amid what an insider called a generation­al shift.

The Telegraph did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment after market hours on Friday, while representa­tives for the Barclay family could not be reached.

Hundreds of Hong Kong medical workers and other anti-government protesters rallied in the Chinese-ruled city’s financial center on Saturday, angry at perceived police brutality during more than four months of sometimes violent unrest. Pro-democracy activists have attacked police with petrol bombs and rocks and shone lasers in their eyes. One officer was slashed in the neck with a knife.

Police have responded with tear gas, water cannon, rubber bullets and occasional live rounds, wounding several protesters, many of whom received treatment from volunteer first aiders at the roadside.

A 26-year-old nurse, who gave his name only as Stephen, said police would often come into the hospital where he works on the Kowloon peninsula and stand outside the wards or search for protesters in the accident and emergency department. “Sometimes they bring their guns and weapons. The patients may be scared. This is not good practice,” he said. “The protesters have injuries. This searching must be done after they are healed.”

He said he worked as a first aider at protest sites in his spare time. “I didn’t tell any of my supervisor­s - only some colleagues with the same values,” he said. “...But when I see people injured, I have to provide first aid.” Police deny accusation­s of brutality, saying they have shown utmost restraint in life-threatenin­g situations and issue warnings to protesters with color-coded signs before they respond with tear gas or baton charges.

Protesters are angry about what they see as creeping Chinese interferen­ce in Hong Kong, a former British colony that returned to Chinese rule in 1997 under a “one country, two systems” formula intended to guarantee freedoms that are not enjoyed on the mainland.

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