Irish Independent

Thousands mark anniversar­y of Hong Kong police clashes

- Zen Soo HONG KONG

THOUSANDS of people across Hong Kong have sung protest songs and marched to mark the one-year anniversar­y of a clash with police outside the semi-autonomous Chinese city’s legislatur­e.

Hundreds gathered in the popular Causeway Bay and Mongkok shopping districts and in the Sha Tin shopping centre in the New Territorie­s yesterday evening.

In Causeway Bay, they held signs reading “Heaven will destroy the CCP”, referring to the ruling Chinese Communist Party.

Riot police stood on standby as protesters shouted slogans and sang the protest anthem ‘Glory To Hong Kong’.

In Mongkok and Causeway Bay, police raised a blue flag, warning the gatherings were unlawful and force might be used to disperse the participan­ts.

Groups of protesters were detained and searched in Mongkok, and in Causeway Bay police used pepper spray and arrested several protesters, including pro-democracy legislator Ted Hui.

Earlier, more than 100 people joined a lunchtime protest in a luxury shopping centre in the Admiralty business district.

They held flags reading “Hong Kong independen­ce” and laid out a large banner saying “The people fear not death, why threaten them with it?”

The protesters were commemorat­ing a demonstrat­ion last year in which tens of thousands of protesters surrounded the legislativ­e building, delaying the start of debate on an extraditio­n bill that would have allowed criminal suspects to be sent to mainland China for trial.

Police used tear gas and rubber bullets to disperse those protesters in one of the first violent clashes in what would become a months-long push for greater democracy.

The protest movement quieted down earlier this year as the coronaviru­s pandemic began, but has picked up steam in recent weeks after China’s ceremonial parliament agreed to enact a new national security law for Hong Kong.

The government says the law is aimed at curbing secessioni­st and subversive behaviour in the city.

Critics say it is an attack on the freedoms promised to Hong Kong when it was handed over to China in 1997.

Hong Kong operates under a “one country, two systems” framework that gives the city rights not found on the mainland, such as freedom of speech and assembly.

Earlier yesterday, more than 100 students formed a human chain in the Kowloon district to protest over the removal of a music teacher for allegedly allowing students to sing protest songs.

 ?? PHOTO: VINCENT YU/AP ?? Unrest: Hong Kong Riot police detain a protester during a protest in Causeway Bay, Hong Kong, yesterday.
PHOTO: VINCENT YU/AP Unrest: Hong Kong Riot police detain a protester during a protest in Causeway Bay, Hong Kong, yesterday.

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