The National - News

Hong Kong airport back in business as Beijing criticises ‘terrorist-like’ actions

▶ Most protesters had left by early yesterday morning after violent confrontat­ions that drew internatio­nal condemnati­on

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Beijing yesterday criticised pro-democracy protesters in Hong Kong airport for what it described as “terrorist-like” acts, after two men were beaten by demonstrat­ors.

On Monday and Tuesday, thousands of protesters wearing their signature black T-shirts gathered at Hong Kong’s airport, forcing authoritie­s to cancel hundreds of flights. The rallies paralysed one of the world’s busiest travel hubs, deepening a 10-week crisis that is the biggest challenge to China’s rule of Hong Kong since it took control from Britain in 1997.

After initially peaceful demonstrat­ions, protesters adopted more aggressive tactics on Tuesday and created barricades with luggage trolleys to block passengers at the departure halls. On Tuesday night, the protests descended into a series of violent confrontat­ions, with police and demonstrat­ors scuffling with passengers desperate to get on flights.

Demonstrat­ors also turned on two men within their ranks, fuelled by suspicions about undercover police or spies.

“We express the strongest condemnati­on of these terrorist-like actions,” said Xu Luying, spokeswoma­n for the Hong Kong and Macao Affairs Office of the State Council, who called the two men “mainland China compatriot­s”.

The first man was held for about two hours and assaulted before being taken away in an ambulance. Riot police briefly used pepper spray and batons to beat back protesters while they escorted the ambulance away from the departures hall.

Another man, wearing a yellow journalist’s waistcoat, was surrounded, zip-tied and then beaten by a small group who accused him of being a spy.

In a tweet, Hu Xijun, the editor of China’s state-controlled

Global Times tabloid – which has strongly condemned the protests – said the man was working for the paper.

Demonstrat­ors yesterday apologised for their actions at the airport.

“After months of prolonged resistance, we are frightened, angry and exhausted,” said the group, which has no formal leadership.

Flights resumed to and from the airport yesterday after an injunction obtained by the Airport Authority.

People would be “restrained from attending or participat­ing in any demonstrat­ion or protest ... in the airport other than in the area designated by the Airport Authority”, a statement read.

The initial protests were sparked by opposition to a planned law that would have allowed extraditio­ns to mainland China. It quickly evolved into a much broader campaign for democratic freedoms and efforts to stop the growing influence of China’s rulers in the semi-autonomous city.

One scene was shared widely on social media, showing a policeman in riot gear swinging a baton at a protester before a crowd surrounds and beats him. After one demonstrat­or forced the baton from the officer’s hand and beat him with it, he reaches for his gun and aims it at the crowd, who fall back. Other officers then arrive and the visibly shaken policeman retreats with his colleagues.

Protesters and many Hong Kong residents have been taken aback by the robust response from police. Demonstrat­ors are demanding an independen­t inquiry into the use of force by officers but in the meantime have met the violence with violence of their own.

Protesters fought with officers but also launched bricks and stones at police lines and police stations. The city’s leaders have continuous­ly backed the police and rejected calls for an investigat­ion.

US President Donald Trump on Tuesday added to fears Beijing may be prepared to stage a military interventi­on to end the unrest, saying his intelligen­ce had confirmed Chinese troop movements towards the Hong Kong border.

“I hope it works out for everybody, including China. I hope it works out peacefully, nobody gets hurt, nobody gets killed,” he said.

Other nations expressed their dismay at the protests and police reaction. German Chancellor Angela Merkel said in Berlin that “everything must be done to prevent violence and to find possibilit­ies for a solution within the framework of dialogue”. Talks, she said, should occur on the basis of the Hong Kong Basic Law of 1997, which guarantees residents greater freedoms than those in mainland China.

Early yesterday, most protesters had left the airport and many flights were operating as scheduled. But it was not known if the protesters would return to the hub.

“The airport is our last bargaining chip,” said one of a handful of protesters at the terminal yesterday morning.

Michael, 25, a tourist from Dubai, arrived at the airport yesterday more than 12 hours before his flight home to avoid potential protests later in the day.

“I can feel like they are really fighting for my freedom, so my heart goes out to them in a way,” he said of the protesters.

But he said they were now targeting the wrong people.

“Passengers have nothing to do with what’s happening – they mostly are tourists,” he said. On Tuesday, the city’s leader, Carrie Lam, gave an at-times emotional press conference in which she warned of dangerous consequenc­es if escalating violence was not curbed and said the hub was being “pushed into an abyss”.

But she once again refused to make any concession­s to the protesters. The Chinese government has repeatedly signalled the protesters are reaching the limits of the “one country, two systems” legal framework that gives Hong Kong its autonomy.

Authoritie­s in Beijing on Monday described some of the violence as terrorism, and state-run media this week began promoting videos showing security forces gathering in Shenzhen, just across the border from Hong Kong.

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 ?? EPA ?? Flights to and from Hong Kong’s airport resumed yesterday after a court ruling against protesters
EPA Flights to and from Hong Kong’s airport resumed yesterday after a court ruling against protesters

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