Chattanooga Times Free Press

Report of riot charges prompts sudden protest

- BY KATIE TAM

HONG KONG — Protesters clashed with police again in Hong Kong on Tuesday night after reports some of their detained colleagues would be charged with the relatively serious charge of rioting.

Several hundred protesters mobilized in the streets outside a police station after Hong Kong media said 44 people had been arrested on riot charges stemming from a Sunday night demonstrat­ion.

They and one other person charged with possession of a weapon were to appear in court on Wednesday, public broadcaste­r RTHK reported.

Live video streamed by Hong Kong media showed protesters chanting slogans and throwing eggs at the Kwai Chung police station. Police used pepper spray to try to disperse them.

The unannounce­d protest

capped another day of unrest. During the morning rush hour, commuters argued with demonstrat­ors who blocked subway train doors in their continuing movement to demand greater accountabi­lity from the semi-autonomous

Chinese territory’s government.

Service was delayed and partially suspended on the Island and Kwun Tong lines, subway operator MTR said. It cited “a number of train door obstructio­ns” as well as someone activating a safety device at a platform on the Kwun Tong line.

The action targeted rush hour traffic at several stations. MTR responded by providing minibuses to replace delayed trains and normal service was restored by around noon.

Protester Ken Chan said he wanted MTR officials to explain why they allegedly failed to take action on July 21 when a large gang of men in white shirts brutally beat dozens of people inside a train station as a massive protest was winding down. Hong Kong’s government and the central authoritie­s in Beijing have blamed protesters for sparking the confrontat­ion.

“How could they let the triads in white attack people on the platform randomly, including the elderly and children in the train?” said Chan, 32, using the common term for members of organized crime groups. “Some of the elderly got smacked on their heads, but (MTR staff) turned a blind eye to it.”

Lorraine Lee, 26, said the subway disruption was an attempt to remind people of the government’s alleged failure to deal with social, economic and political injustices.

“The government has not been addressing the problems in our society,” Lee said. “That is why now Hong Kongers have no choice but to use different ‘creative’ approaches to remind people what is happening in Hong Kong.”

AP video showed heated exchanges at Tiu Keng Leng station, where a crowd of protesters and commuters filled the platform and a stopped train.

The disruption is part of a pro-democracy movement that has seen hundreds of thousands take to the streets this summer for marches and rallies. The protests have shaken the government in Hong Kong and raised concerns in Beijing. Hong Kong is part of China but has a fair degree of autonomy in local affairs.

 ?? AP PHOTO/VINCENT YU ?? A protester waves a U.S. flag as hundreds of protesters gather outside Kwai Chung police station in Hong Kong on Tuesday.
AP PHOTO/VINCENT YU A protester waves a U.S. flag as hundreds of protesters gather outside Kwai Chung police station in Hong Kong on Tuesday.

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