Bangkok Post

Thousands rally in fresh Hong Kong protest

Rally-goers resort to ‘hit-and-run’ tactics

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HONG KONG: Thousands of prodemocra­cy protesters hit the streets of Hong Kong yesterday for the 10th weekend in a row, once again defying police after a night of “hit-and-run” rallies across the city.

Activists calling for greater democratic freedoms in the city have shown no sign of standing down, despite Hong Kong’s leader insisting she will not meet their demands.

Early yesterday afternoon, hundreds of protesters were gathered in the city’s Victoria Park, braving hot and humid conditions and a police ban on the demonstrat­ion following a planned march route from the park.

“The police should try their best to maintain public security instead of rejecting our request to march,” said a 25-year-old protester who gave only her family name, Wong.

“We’re still here ... and we’ll see if we feel like marching later. We won’t worry that much about illegal assembly. We still have our rights,” she said.

Police have given protesters a permit to gather at the park, but denied their request to stage a march through an eastern part of Hong Kong Island.

They also denied protesters a permit for a second protest in the city’s working class neighbourh­ood of Sham Shui Po, but a rally was also under way there.

“It will be no good for Hong Kong if everyone is scared and no one dares to come out,” Ms Wong said. “We should have freedom from fear.”

The fresh protests come after a night of cat-and-mouse demonstrat­ions around the city, with protesters taking their mantra of flexible action — “Be Water” — to new heights.

Groups of protesters sporting helmets and gas masks, dressed in their movement’s signature black, blocked intersecti­ons across the city for hours throughout the night.

In several locations, riot police fired

tear gas, and 16 people were arrested, but the rallies largely avoided the lengthy pitched battles between the two sides that have been seen in recent weeks.

Protesters said they were adopting a new strategy to try to minimise direct confrontat­ions with police.

“Our aim is no injuries, no bleeding and not getting arrested,” said a 17-year-old student protester who gave his family name as Chan.

“I think our previous tactics of staying in one place led to many arrests and injuries ... we need to ‘be water’ to avoid injuries,” he said at the Victoria Park gathering.

Protesters were also on their third and final day of a sit-in at the city’s airport that was billed as way to explain their movement to sometimes bemused arriving visitors.

The demonstrat­ions that began more than two months ago in opposition to a bill allowing extraditio­ns to mainland China have morphed into a broader bid to reverse a slide in democratic freedoms in the city.

The movement has been seen as the biggest threat to Beijing’s rule of the semi-autonomous Chinese city since its handover from the British in 1997.

And the city’s Beijing-appointed leader Carrie Lam has made clear she will not grant the protesters’ demands, which include a full withdrawal of the now-suspended extraditio­n bill, direct election of the city’s leader and an investigat­ion into police violence.

On Friday, she ruled out concession­s “in order to silence the violent protesters”, saying what the city needed was “to stop the violence”.

 ?? AFP ?? Messages are posted against the controvers­ial extraditio­n bill at Hong Kong’s Internatio­nal Airport yesterday.
AFP Messages are posted against the controvers­ial extraditio­n bill at Hong Kong’s Internatio­nal Airport yesterday.

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