The Citizen (Gauteng)

Dancer now learns to fight

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– Before protests erupted across her Hong Kong hometown five months ago, 31-year-old Pino was a dancer, taking various types of evening classes for years, from jazz to hiphop and pole.

Now, the slight informatio­n technology worker, who wanted to be identified only by her first name, is learning to fight.

“I stopped dancing, I’m fighting now,” she said.

Once a week, Pino joins a self-defence class where instructor­s give lessons on how to fight police, evade arrest and navigate the unrest on the streets of the Asian financial hub. Lessons sometimes incorporat­e videos of real protest clashes.

These classes are one of several that have sprung up in recent months, say protesters, pitched at demonstrat­ors and others concerned about getting caught in the chaos.

The rallies have been marred by violence which flares mostly during weekends, with demonstrat­ors throwing Molotov cocktails, destroying shops seen as pro-Beijing, vandalisin­g train stations and engaging in running battles with police.

“Not only the frontliner­s or the youngsters, we all need to learn these skills to protect ourselves,” said William Cheung, the organiser of one self-defence class held regularly at the Chinese University of Hong Kong.

Outside the university’s library, about a dozen students recently fenced with foam sticks representi­ng the black batons used by police and practised shielding blows with their backpacks.

“The topic of today’s lesson is escaping,” said R, a 19-yearold participan­t who asked to be named.

“It looks like the fight is not coming to an end soon, and I don’t know for how much longer it will last,” he said, explaining why he felt the classes were necessary.

Demonstrat­ors have also been fearful of attacks from other groups, particular­ly after suspected triad members set upon activists and commuters at a train station in Yuen Long district in July.

“If you don’t protect yourselves well, then you don’t know whether you’ll be beaten to death, or something bad may happen like being injured and hospitalis­ed,” said Cheung.

Police did not immediatel­y respond to request for comment. – Reuters

Hong Kong

Beijing

China warned yesterday it would not tolerate any challenge to Hong Kong’s governing system, as it laid out plans to boost patriotism in the city and change how its leader is chosen or removed after months of pro-democracy protests.

Beijing also said it would brook no foreign interferen­ce in Hong Kong affairs as it discussed the unrest in the semi-autonomous city at a major, four-day meeting of the Communist Party chaired by President Xi Jinping, according to a senior party cadre.

The central government in Beijing has so far voiced its confidence in Hong Kong chief executive Carrie Lam and the city police to put a lid on the

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? ACTION. A man holds a banner as he joins others during a pro-democracy flash mob rally at lunchtime in the Central district in Hong Kong yesterday. The semi-autonomous Chinese city has been upended by nearly five months of huge, often violent, pro-democracy demonstrat­ions as Beijing and city leaders adopt a hardline approach.
Picture: AFP ACTION. A man holds a banner as he joins others during a pro-democracy flash mob rally at lunchtime in the Central district in Hong Kong yesterday. The semi-autonomous Chinese city has been upended by nearly five months of huge, often violent, pro-democracy demonstrat­ions as Beijing and city leaders adopt a hardline approach.

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