The Sunday Telegraph

‘As a Briton, I had to join Hong Kong’s battle for democracy’

- By Nicola Smith ASIA CORRESPOND­ENT in Hong Kong

As pepper balls and rubber bullets rained down on the crowd of Hong Kong protesters crouched by the entrance of a car park tunnel, protecting themselves from the riot police with flimsy umbrellas, a chill of terror swept over one young man as he dived for cover with his girlfriend.

“I remember the moment when it felt like a truck hit the end of my umbrella, it was like it didn’t even exist. I put my arm under [her] and said get your head down. Our umbrellas were caving in,” said the protester, who asked to be identified as Mark.

That night in October Mark blended into the crowd of mainly black-clad protesters, most of them wearing face masks. But as one of the few British expats to join the front lines of the protests, he had a unique perspectiv­e.

Speaking to The Sunday Telegraph as protests returned to Hong Kong last week he said he had taken to the streets of his adopted city because his own government had “turned its back” on the people of Hong Kong.

The UK Government this week offered a “path to citizenshi­p” to almost three million Hong Kong residents as it condemned China’s move to crush dissent in the former British colony. But Britain has been criticised for failing to act against the steady erosion of Hong Kong’s rights and freedoms for years. It stands accused of doing too little too late to support the prodemocra­cy movement.

When Mark first moved to Hong Kong he expected, and initially experience­d, a “very privileged life” of enjoying the city’s glamour, wealth and nightlife. But as strife gripped the city in opposition to a controvers­ial extraditio­n bill and, more widely, against Beijing’s rule, he said he could no longer take his human rights for granted or stand on the sidelines.

“Being British and seeing that the British Government had done nothing, even now, it really made me want to do my part on behalf of what the British Government isn’t doing,” he said.

A sense of duty “to do what’s right” motivated him to continue supporting the pro-democracy cause, risking being caught up in the mass arrests of this week, or being crushed in a car park tunnel last October, he said.

The day of that protest was China’s National Day, and the streets of Hong

Kong had erupted into violent clashes. Tens of thousands had protested against Beijing’s grip, but the rally spiralled into running street battles with riot police after an officer shot a teenager. Protesters hurled petrol bombs and stones from burning barricades, while the police used water cannons, tear gas and rubber bullets.

The 50 or so people trapped in the narrow tunnel had a lucky escape. A sympatheti­c security guard unlocked the exit into the car park allowing them to flood in, gasping for air and scrambling to hide. An office worker

then helped them to leave safely in twos and threes from a neighbouri­ng building. The “terrifying” incident was a turning point for Mark. In shock, he concluded that the police “wanted to trap and brutalise us. They knew there was probably no way out of this tunnel so it was just target practice for them. They knew that this tunnel was going to be toxic with tear gas.”

Hong Kong’s police force face multiple accusation­s of excessive force during anti-government protests, a charge they repeatedly deny.

Mark recalls blood pouring from his knee after being injured by glass. He was also injured on the night he held a Molotov cocktail in his hand for the first time, which he lobbed at a barricade. “That’s the only time I’ve thrown a Molotov and I wouldn’t do it again,” he said. Although the stakes were high and the authoritie­s would make an example of him if he was caught protesting, the risk was worth it to defend people’s rights, said Mark.

“It’s simply the freedom of being able to express myself and to stand against an injustice and not. fear that my life might come to ruin simply because I spoke about a political event,” he said. “Teachers are losing their jobs, people are losing their livelihood­s, simply because their employer or the government has found out they are pro-democracy.”

His Hong Kong friends – too young to qualify for the British National Overseas passport – are resigned to the lack of support from the UK Government, and to resisting Chinese encroachme­nt on their own.

“A lot of people have said if Hong Kong is going to become part of China, then I’m not going to have kids. I’m going to emigrate and then the Chinese government gets the land but the people will just move on,” he said. He and his girlfriend would leave together if they needed to flee to safety.

But he warned that China would not stop if the internatio­nal community did nothing in Hong Kong.

“In 20 to 30 years, what happens if they want to take Taiwan? And they say, OK, we didn’t get much resistance, we can politicall­y play this. What’s next?”

‘What happens if they want to take Taiwan? What’s next?’

 ??  ?? Escape route: A protester holds a British National (Overseas) passport. The UK Government says it could grant Hong Kong residents greater visa rights
Escape route: A protester holds a British National (Overseas) passport. The UK Government says it could grant Hong Kong residents greater visa rights
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom