The Jerusalem Post

Hong Kong descends into chaos as protesters storm legislatur­e

Anger over extraditio­n bill coincides with handover rally

- • By JOHN RUWITCH and SUMEET CHATTERJEE

HONG KONG (Reuters) – Hong Kong protesters stormed the Legislativ­e Council on Monday on the anniversar­y of the former British colony’s 1997 return to Chinese rule, amid widespread anger over laws that would allow extraditio­ns to China.

A small group of mostly students wearing hard hats and masks used a metal trolley, poles and pieces of scaffoldin­g to charge again and again at the compound’s reinforced glass, which finally caved in.

Some protesters broke into the building, but it was unclear how many were still inside. The council, Hong Kong’s mini-parliament, issued a red alert, ordering the protesters to leave immediatel­y.

It did not say what would happen if they didn’t.

Protesters franticall­y shouted for and passed on helmets, cling film, masks and other utilities. Periodic shouts of “helmets!”, “gloves” rang out as the crowd tried to get supplies to the front lines.

Riot police in helmets and carrying batons fired pepper spray as the standoff continued into the sweltering heat of the evening. Some demonstrat­ors removed steel bars that were reinforcin­g parts of the council building.

The protesters, some with cling film wrapped around their arms to protect their skin in the event of tear gas, once again paralyzed parts of the Asian financial hub as they occupied roads after blocking them off with metal barriers.

Some were building barricades with steel pipes on the approach roads, facing outward like a porcupine to keep the police back, and scouring nearby streets for railings.

Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam suspended the bill on June 15 after some of the largest and most violent protests in the city in decades, but stopped short of protesters’ demands to scrap it.

The Beijing-backed leader is now clinging to her job at a time of an unpreceden­ted backlash against the government and a series of mass protests that poses the greatest popular challenge to Chinese leader Xi Jinping since he came to power in 2012.

“This is the end of Hong Kong,” said a 60-year-old housewife surnamed Lau, who holds a foreign passport. “If Carrie Lam continues to be our chief executive, we only see real darkness ahead. So we want to fight for the young people. I have friends... They don’t want their children to grow up in a just another Chinese city with no future for the next generation.”

Opponents of the extraditio­n bill, which would allow people to be sent to mainland China for trial in courts controlled by the Communist Party, fear it is a threat to Hong Kong’s much-cherished rule of law and are demanding it be scrapped and Lam step down.

Hong Kong returned to China under a “one country, two systems” formula that allows freedoms not enjoyed in mainland China, including freedom to protest and an independen­t judiciary.

Beijing denies interferin­g, but for many Hong Kong residents, the extraditio­n bill is the latest step in a relentless march toward mainland control.

China has been angered by criticism from Western capitals, including Washington and London, about the legislatio­n.

Beijing said on Monday that Britain had no responsibi­lity for Hong Kong anymore, and was opposed to its “gesticulat­ing” about the territory.

TENS OF THOUSANDS marched in temperatur­es of around 33 degrees Celsius from Victoria Park in an annual rally that organizers hoped would get a boost from the anger over the extraditio­n bill. Many clapped as protesters held up a poster of Lam inside a bamboo cage.

More than a million people have taken to the streets at times over the past three weeks to vent their anger.

A tired-looking Lam appeared in public for the first time in nearly two weeks, flanked by her husband and former Hong Kong leader Tung Chee-hwa.

“The incident that happened in recent months has led to controvers­ies and disputes between the public and the government,” she said. “This has made me fully realize that I, as a politician, have to remind myself all the time of the need to grasp public sentiment accurately.”

Beijing’s grip over Hong Kong has intensifie­d markedly since Xi took power, and after pro-democracy street protests that gripped the city in 2014 but failed to wrestle concession­s from China.

The extraditio­n bill has sent jitters across all sectors of Hong Kong in an unpreceden­ted backlash against the government.

Tensions spiraled on June 12 when police fired rubber bullets and tear gas at anti-extraditio­n protesters near the heart of the city, sending plumes of smoke billowing among some of the world’s tallest skyscraper­s.

The uproar over the bill has reignited a protest movement that had lost steam after the failed 2014 demonstrat­ions that led to the arrests of hundreds of activists.

Activists raised a black bauhinia flag to half-mast outside the Legislativ­e Council building before the rally and turned Hong Kong’s official flag, featuring a white bauhinia flower on a red background, upside down. The turmoil comes at a delicate time for Beijing, which is grappling with a trade dispute with the United States, a faltering economy and tensions in the South China Sea.

Opponents of the extraditio­n bill fear it would put them at the mercy of China’s justice system, where human rights are not guaranteed.

Beyond the public outcry, the extraditio­n bill has spooked some of Hong Kong’s tycoons into starting to move their personal wealth offshore, according to financial advisers, bankers and lawyers familiar with the details.

 ?? (Tyrone Siu/Reuters) ?? ANTI-EXTRADITIO­N bill protesters use the flashlight­s from their phones as they march in Hong Kong yesterday during the anniversar­y of Hong Kong’s handover to China.
(Tyrone Siu/Reuters) ANTI-EXTRADITIO­N bill protesters use the flashlight­s from their phones as they march in Hong Kong yesterday during the anniversar­y of Hong Kong’s handover to China.

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