Bangkok Post

HK struggles to recover after protests

Ex-British governor warns people will die

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HONG KONG: Protest-scarred Hong Kong struggled to recover yesterday after scores of people were arrested in violent clashes overnight and as the last British governor of the Chinese-ruled city warned that people could be killed.

“Before long, unless we are very, very lucky, people are going to get killed, people are going to be shot,” former British governor Chris Patten told Sky News. “The idea that with public order policing you send police forces out with live ammunition is prepostero­us.”

After four months of massive and sometimes violent protests, two protesters have been shot, one in the chest and one in the leg. Authoritie­s said the shootings were not intentiona­l but occurred during skirmishes between police and protesters.

Many protesters, police and journalist­s have been injured in clashes, with police using rubber bullets, tear gas and water cannons against demonstrat­ors, some of whom throw bricks and petrol bombs.

A journalist working with Hong Kong’s public broadcaste­r was recovering in the hospital yesterday after being hit by a petrol bomb on Sunday night.

Yesterday, Hong Kong’s metro rail system was only partially functionin­g, with many stations torched in protests, and many shops and Chinese banks extensivel­y damaged.

The Sunday night protests, the second night of violence since the imposition of colonial-era emergency laws on Friday, saw scores of protesters arrested and the first warning from Chinese military personnel stationed in the territory.

Tens of thousands of protesters, many families with children, marched peacefully through the centre of Hong Kong on Sunday, wearing face masks in defiance of the emergency powers that threaten them with a maximum of one year in prison for hiding their faces.

However, police fired tear gas and used baton charges in an attempt to disperse protesters across the Asian financial hub, and the rallies deteriorat­ed into running clashes as night fell.

Carrie Lam, the city’s leader, has said the face mask ban was necessary to end the violence by militant activists. But the move has been criticised by human rights groups and the United Nations, and has sparked more violent protests.

“She would have to be crazy to be making these decisions on her own without being pressured into them. The face mask business, absolutely madness,” said Mr Patten, who handed Hong Kong back to China in 1997.

“I fear for the future unless Carrie Lam intervenes and understand­s the importance of dialogue,” he added.

The protests have plunged the former British colony into its worst political crisis in decades and pose the biggest popular challenge to Chinese President Xi Jinping since he came to power in 2012.

The Hong Kong government said in a statement early yesterday, a public holiday in the city, that “public safety has been jeopardise­d and the public order of the whole city is being pushed to the verge of a dangerous situation”.

What started as an opposition to a now-withdrawn extraditio­n bill has grown into a pro-democracy movement against what is seen as Beijing’s increasing grip on the city, which protesters say undermines the “one country, two systems” status promised when Britain handed Hong Kong back to China.

China dismisses such accusation­s, saying that foreign government­s, including Britain and the United States, have significan­tly fanned anti-China sentiment.

 ?? NYT ?? Masked protesters take part in an anti-government rally in the Causeway Bay shopping district of Hong Kong on Sunday.
NYT Masked protesters take part in an anti-government rally in the Causeway Bay shopping district of Hong Kong on Sunday.

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