The Citizen (Gauteng)

Hong Kongers gear up for calamity

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– While months of anti-government protests have taken a toll on Hong Kong businesses, from luxury retailers to hotels and restaurant­s, Keita Lee’s pop-up stall is thriving.

Since demonstrat­ions escalated in mid-June, Lee, 33, has been running what he has dubbed the National Calamity Hardware Store, selling protest essentials – hard hats, gas masks and goggles – near rally hot spots.

Part entreprene­ur, part activist, he has taken out short-term leases on store fronts in at least four districts, shifting to evade police and hostile landlords.

“I’ve never had a business like this before. It’s insane,” Lee said from his latest shop in the gritty district of Cheung Sha Wan on the Kowloon peninsula.

Hong Kong’s government invoked colonial-era emergency laws last week, including a ban on face masks, which have been widely used by protesters to hide their identities. Lee dismissed any suggestion the regulation would hurt his business, saying more protesters had come to his stall.

“The legislatio­n of the anti-mask law only intensifie­s the social conflict,” he said. “If the government can invoke emergency powers to pass certain laws or ordinances, they can use it to pass other unreasonab­le bills recklessly.”

Protests against a now-withdrawn extraditio­n law that would have allowed suspects to be sent to mainland China for trial, have evolved into a broader fight for greater democracy, plunging Hong Kong into its biggest political crisis in decades.

Most weekends, black-clad protesters throng the streets in demonstrat­ions that have increasing­ly descended into violent clashes with police, who often fire tear gas and rubber bullets to disperse crowds.

Protective equipment has become harder to find since the Chinese government restricted sales and exports of safety equipment into Hong Kong. This has made Lee even more determined to keep his business going.

“Hong Kong has a free market. I am running the business without violating any law. We only announce our pop-up address one hour before we open so it’s almost impossible for the police to obtain a search warrant in time,” he said.

Lee says his stall has been a constant target of the police and he has been arrested twice.

Police said in a statement that a 33-year-old surnamed Lee, and five others, had been arrested on September 30 on charges including possession of offensive weapons and inciting and taking part in unauthoris­ed assemblies. They were released on bail.

Lee says it is a constant challenge to find new suppliers.

His political views go further than some other protesters. He openly backs independen­ce for the territory, a taboo topic for Beijing. – Reuters

Hong Kong

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