Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Chinese police practice near Hong Kong bridge

- DAKE KANG AND YVES DAM VAN

SHENZHEN, China — Members of China’s paramilita­ry People’s Armed Police marched and practiced crowd control tactics at a sports complex in Shenzhen across from Hong Kong on Friday, in what some interprete­d as a threat against pro-democracy protesters in the semiautono­mous territory.

The sound of marching boots and synchroniz­ed shouts echoed from the grounds. Officers in green camouflage stood guard at closed entrances. A stadium security guard said “it wasn’t clear” when the paramilita­ry police would leave the grounds.

Chinese state media have only said that the Shenzhen exercises were planned earlier and were not directly related to the unrest in Hong Kong, though they came shortly after the central government in Beijing said the protests were beginning to show the “sprouts of terrorism.”

From a distance, police could be seen conducting drills in military fatigues, using shields, poles and other riot-control gear. In one exercise, two groups marched in formation with those in front raising shields as if to protect themselves from projectile­s. Others behind held red flags and banners. The words “the law” and “prosecuted” could be seen on one.

Outside, dozens of armored carriers and trucks sat in the parking lot of the Shenzhen Bay Stadium, close to a bridge linking mainland China to Hong Kong.

Asked if Hong Kong police could maintain order or if mainland Chinese interventi­on is becoming inevitable, Hong Kong police commander Yeung Manpun said that while they face tremendous pressure, “I can tell you we’re confident the police have the capability to maintain law and order.”

Weeks of protests in Hong Kong have been marked by increasing violence and a shutdown of the Hong Kong airport earlier this week. The demonstrat­ors are demanding expanded political rights and the scrapping of legislatio­n that could have seen criminal suspects sent to mainland China.

A weekend of protests began Friday night with a university student-led “power to the people” rally in Chater Garden, a public square in the financial district.

A pro-democracy march is planned for today along with a separate pro-government “Save Hong Kong” rally, ahead of a major pro-democracy rally called for Sunday. Police have denied permission for the march on Sunday, but protesters have ignored such denials in the past.

The CEO of Cathay Pacific Airways, one of Hong Kong’s most prominent companies, resigned Friday after pressure by Beijing on the carrier over participat­ion by some of its employees in the anti-government protests.

Cathay Pacific said Rupert Hogg resigned “to take responsibi­lity” following “recent events.”

The company chairman, John Slosar, said in a statement the airline needed new management because events had “called into question” its commitment to safety and security.

On Monday, Hogg threatened employees with “disciplina­ry consequenc­es” if they took part in “illegal protests.”

Last week, China’s aviation regulator said Cathay Pacific employees who “support or take part in illegal protests, violent actions, or overly radical behavior” are banned from staffing flights to mainland China.

On Friday morning, Frenchman Alain Robert, who has been dubbed “spiderman” for his unauthoriz­ed climbs of skyscraper­s, hung a banner appealing for peace as he scaled the 62-story Cheung Kong Center, a landmark Hong Kong building that is the base for property tycoon Li Ka-shing’s business empire.

 ?? AP/DAKE KANG ?? Armored vehicles and troop trucks sit Friday outside Shenzhen Bay Stadium in Shenzhen, where Chinese paramilita­ry police were taking part in crowd-control exercises.
AP/DAKE KANG Armored vehicles and troop trucks sit Friday outside Shenzhen Bay Stadium in Shenzhen, where Chinese paramilita­ry police were taking part in crowd-control exercises.

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