Houston Chronicle

Strikes in Hong Kong sink city into chaos

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HONG KONG — Hong Kong tumbled into chaos Monday night, with multiple neighborho­ods bathed in a neon haze of tear gas as police, residents and protesters clashed in simultaneo­us confrontat­ions across the city. Clashes unfolded in the city’s central financial district, business and shopping areas, working-class neighborho­ods and rural suburbs.

The chaos came after a day of strikes and civil disobedien­ce that had paralyzed much of the city’s public transporta­tion system through the morning.

Hong Kong is in its ninth week of protests, triggered by a proposed extraditio­n bill that symbolized Beijing’s unwanted influence on the territory, now a movement demanding government accountabi­lity, scrutiny of the police and democratic reforms.

Protesters blocked subway doors, pressed emergency buttons in the mass transit stations and placed bikes, trolleys and other objects on the train tracks, causing most of the subway lines to be suspended during the usual commuter rush hour.

More than 200 flights out of Hong Kong’s internatio­nal airport were canceled as air traffic controller­s went on strike along with tens of thousands of others from more than 20 business sectors.

At 10 a.m. Chief Executive Carrie Lam held a news conference for the first time in two weeks, blaming protesters for disrupting the workday, harming Hong Kong’s economy and harboring “ulterior motives” of revolution and Hong Kong’s destructio­n.

“This is the time for us to rally together, to set aside difference­s and bring back order and say ‘no’ to chaos and violence,” Lam said, adding that she had addressed protesters’ demands by suspending the extraditio­n bill and that she would not resign.

“I don’t think at this point in time resignatio­n of myself or some of my colleagues will provide a better solution,” Lam said. She said she was sad about the police being put under pressure and did not agree to an independen­t inquiry into police violence.

By 1 p.m., tens of thousands of protesters streamed to seven simultaneo­us rallies in blazing heat.

“No rioters, only tyranny! Carrie Lam, step down!” chanted thousands of protesters at a sports stadium in the busy market district of Mong Kok. They strung up pictures of Lam, police and other government officials as targets in a soccer net.

Rally organizer Ventus Lau, 25, criticized Lam’s speech.

“The only person who can stop this problem is herself,” Lau said. If the chief executive would compromise and agree to even one or two of the protesters’ demands, that would de-escalate the situation, he said.

“She is the one pushing Hong Kong to the edge of danger.”

Tens of thousands flocked to a mall in the suburban neighborho­od of Sha Tin, where near-daily protests have taken place since police fought protesters in a bloody clash in mid-July.

“Hong Kong police!” bellowed Neil Chan, 30, a Sha Tin resident, from on top of an escalator.

“They know the law, they break the law!” responded a seated crowd of thousands wearing black and waving yellow strike signs on the mall floor below.

“Hong Kong police need to protect Hong Kong people, but now they are only fighting Hong Kong people. What the hell?” said Chan, who was striking from a delivery job.

He was livid that police had fought with protesters inside his neighborho­od shopping mall and that they had failed to protect civilians from an armed thug attack in July.

“Police need to be punished. We need an independen­t committee to make them stop the violence and stop fighting Hong Kong people,” Chan said.

Roy Lo, 28, a Yuen Long resident and building surveyor on strike, said he’d come to Sha Ti n because he feared his own neighborho­od — where thugs had attacked previously —- was unsafe.

“We can see in videos that Hong Kong police are together with these whiteshirt attackers. We cannot accept a society run by police and thugs,” Lo said.

Two cars later drove through protesters’ barricades in Yuen Long and Sha Tin during the rallies, injuring several people.

Police began shooting tear gas around 5 p.m. in Admiralty, where protesters had returned to the government headquarte­rs and legislativ­e buildings for the first time since breaking in and vandalizin­g the legislativ­e chamber on July 1.

In North Point, a neighborho­od on Hong Kong Island known for having many pro-Beijing residents, men wearing white and black T-shirts waited for protesters to arrive, bearing bamboo rods and wooden sticks similar to those held by local gangs who had attacked protesters and passersby in Yuen Long several weeks ago.

This time, protesters fought back. Traffic cones, metal street barriers and bamboo sticks flew in the air above the two crowds as they brawled in the streets. Residents threw glass bottles from overhead at the protesters, who flashed lasers back into their windows.

Across the harbor in Kowloon and the rural suburbs called the New Territorie­s, protesters surrounded police stations, scrawling insults on the outer walls and flashing lasers at dormitory windows. Once police came out with tear gas and pepper spray, some protesters escalated by throwing bricks, stones and burning objects at police stations as well as setting barricades on fire.

Some protesters removed a Chinese national flag and dumped it into Victoria Harbor for the second night in a row.

Hong Kong police said at a news briefing that they had arrested 420 people aged 14 to 76 in relation to protests and fired 1,000 tear gas rounds and 160 rubber bullets since June 9, not including Monday.

By late Monday night, the number of arrests had increased past 500 and continued to rise.

 ?? Anthony Kwan / Getty Images ?? Riot police fire tear gas at protesters during a demonstrat­ion in Wong Tai Sin District on Monday in Hong Kong, China. Pro-democracy protesters have continued rallies against a controvers­ial extraditio­n bill.
Anthony Kwan / Getty Images Riot police fire tear gas at protesters during a demonstrat­ion in Wong Tai Sin District on Monday in Hong Kong, China. Pro-democracy protesters have continued rallies against a controvers­ial extraditio­n bill.

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