The Manila Times

HK folk decry protester’s shooting

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HONG KONG: Heads bowed and dressed in black, schoolmate­s of a teenage demonstrat­or shot at close range in the chest by a Hong Kong riot officer condemned police tactics and demanded accountabi­lity Wednesday.

The shooting Tuesday during widespread anti-government demonstrat­ions on China’s National Day marked a fearsome escalation in Hong Kong’s protest violence. protests began in June.

His condition in the hospital was described by the government as stable on Wednesday.

- er struck him with a metal rod. His use of lethal weaponry is sure to inflame widespread public anger about police tactics during the crisis, widely condemned as heavy handed.

“The Hong Kong police have gone trigger-happy and nuts,” pro-democracy lawmaker Claudia Mo said Wednesday.

Having repeatedly viewed video of the shooting, Mo said: “The sensible police response should have been using a police baton back. It wasn’t exactly an extreme situation and the use of live bullet

Several hundred people, including students, protested with quiet fury at the wounded demonstrat­or’s school in the Tsuen Wan district of Hong Kong on Wednesday morning.

Sitting crossed-legged, some held an arm across their chest to below their left shoulder — the location of the teenager’s gunshot wound. One held a handwritte­n message condemning “thug police.”

always the egg and they are the wall,” said a student who gave only his surname, Wong. “We are just bullied by them.”

The police chief defended - missioner Stephen Lo said late Tuesday night that the officer had feared for his life and made with a single shot at close range.

“It was the attacker who decided to come so close,” Lo said. “He had no choice, he could only use the weapon that he had available.” Lo said there is no order for police to shoot if they are under threat but they can use appropriat­e force.

He described protesters as “rioters,” saying they have committed widespread criminal acts including 25 who were injured, to destroying public property and vandalizin­g shops and banks linked to China.

Local TV stations showed two - ing pistols as protesters who - versary of Communist rule fought pitched battles with riot police.

“These turned out to be very dangerous riots,” Hong Kong’s government said in a statement Wednesday that described protesters who carried out widespread acts of vandalism as “the mob.”

It claimed rioting was “planned and organized” and called upon parents and teachers to help restrain young protesters. “What the society does not want to see is students being stirred to break the law,” it said.

Video that spread quickly on social media appeared to show masked teenager came at him with a metal rod, striking the

Taken by the City University Student Union, it showed a dozen black- clad protesters throwing objects at police and The protester toppled backward onto the street, bleeding from below his left shoulder.

As another protester rushed in to try to drag away the wounded youth and was tackled by an in the middle of the group of of

Riot police fired tear gas in at least six locations and used water cannons in the business district as usually bustling streets

Determined to thumb their noses at Chinese President Xi Jinping, protesters ignored a security clampdown that saw nearly four dozen subway stations closed.

Chanting anti-China slogans and “Freedom for Hong Kong,” tens of thousands of peaceful marchers dressed in mournful black also demonstrat­ed along a broad thoroughfa­re downtown

Organizers said that rally at Police didn’t give an estimate.

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