Los Angeles Times

China warns Hong Kong protesters

The army issues a rebuke and releases a promotiona­l video showing troops in anti-riot training.

- By Alice Su

BEIJING — China’s powerful military has issued a stern warning to protesters in Hong Kong — simultaneo­usly releasing a video to bolster its strong words — vowing to defend the nation’s sovereignt­y and maintain stability against “intolerabl­e” demonstrat­ions that have racked the semiautono­mous territory for weeks.

“We resolutely support the action to maintain Hong Kong ’s rule of law by the people who love the nation and the city, and we are determined to protect national sovereignt­y, security, stability and the prosperity of Hong Kong,” Chen Daoxiang, commander of the People’s Liberation Army garrison in Hong Kong, said Wednesday night. In an extraordin­ary rebuke at a Chinese army event Wednesday, Chen referred to the protests as “intolerabl­e” and added that the military was ready to uphold Chinese sovereignt­y and keep order in Hong Kong.

The self-promotiona­l army video the garrison released has been widely shared on Chinese social media.

Slogans of “Fight Terror” and “Maintain Stability” flash in the video as Chinese military officers slide down ropes from a helicopter, drive armored personnel carriers and launch missiles against a backdrop of dramatic music.

In one section that mirrors Hong Kong police clashes with pro-democracy protesters, an officer shouts in Cantonese, “All consequenc­es at your own risk,” then charges forward with an armored phalanx of Chinese military troops, shooting tear gas at a group of pretend rioters.

Later, the music turns soft and inspiratio­nal as video rolls of civilians wiping sweat off officers’ faces and praising the army for being “strong,” “neat” and “handsome.”

Analysts say that Chen’s comments and the video are part of a propaganda effort aimed at stoking domestic nationalis­m and putting psychologi­cal pressure on the protesters but that military action remains unlikely.

“The videos and statements are for a domestic audience, to show that they’re very determined to protect sovereignt­y and crush rebellious elements,” said HoFung Hung, a sociologis­t at Johns Hopkins University.

But Beijing will probably only “heat up the rhetoric” without actually sending in troops, which would be too much of a liability for President Xi Jinping, he said.

“If the Hong Kong police accidental­ly or intentiona­lly kill somebody or something bad happens, Beijing can always say the local authoritie­s did it,” Hung said.

“If they use the [army], it is going to be mobilized by the Central Military Committee and Xi Jinping himself, and if anything goes wrong, Xi Jinping cannot be exonerated from this.”

Beijing’s highest government office for Hong Kong affairs held a news conference Monday in which spokesman Yang Guang said the central government backed Hong Kong’s police and government but did not directly answer questions about military interventi­on.

Yang, like Chen, only referred to a part of Hong Kong law stating that the army garrison would not interfere in local affairs unless requested by the Hong Kong government to keep order.

Chinese officials have meanwhile accused the U.S. of orchestrat­ing Hong Kong’s protests, which U.S. officials have denied.

Antony Dapiran, a Hong Kong-based lawyer and author of a book about dissent in the territory, agreed that the army video was part of a broader message of support for Hong Kong police, not an indication that interventi­on is imminent.

“The Hong Kong police are more than capable of maintainin­g order,” Dapiran said.

Beijing’s support will probably empower police to switch from merely dispersing protesters to making mass arrests at upcoming protests, Dapiran said, adding that young protesters are no longer afraid of tear gas but might be deterred by riot charges and serious jail sentences.

Forty-four protesters arrested in clashes with police Sunday were charged with “rioting” this week, an offense punishable by up to 10 years in prison.

Beijing is walking a fine line in trying to scare protesters without going so far that China’s reputation is irrevocabl­y damaged, said Willy Lam, professor of China studies at the Chinese University of Hong Kong.

When the army first sent tanks and armored personnel carriers into Beijing in 1989, they were initially surrounded by residents and “stopped in their tracks” before later massacring student protesters in Tiananmen Square, Lam said.

Xi does not want that scene to repeat in Hong Kong because it would destroy China’s reputation, drive a mass exodus of middle-class Hong Kongers and cause the stock market to crash, Lam said.

Beijing might achieve its psychologi­cal goals by deploying only a few hundred of the Hong Kong garrison’s several thousand soldiers to guard government buildings, Lam said. “The best result, from Beijing’s point of view, will be that people will be scared.”

Chinese military propaganda is, so far, unlikely to deter protesters from continued demonstrat­ions, including three marches over the weekend and a planned citywide strike and rallies in seven districts of Hong Kong on Monday.

As police escalate their means of repressing protesters, what started as a peaceful movement against an unwanted extraditio­n bill has become a growing wave of anger against police, local gangs and Chief Executive Carrie Lam.

Representa­tives from Hong Kong’s education, law, business and civil society spheres are demanding an independen­t investigat­ion into alleged police violence.

That investigat­ion, along with forcing Carrie Lam’s resignatio­n, would be Beijing’s two best options for de-escalation at minimal cost, said Lam, the Hong Kong professor. But neither is likely.

“Beijing is dead-set against establishm­ent of an independen­t commission of inquiry,” he said. “They need the police, just as in Tiananmen they needed the soldiers.”

“Sacking Carrie Lam would mean succumbing to pressure from the protesters. It would mean admission that Beijing has made a mistake, and the Chinese Communist Party doesn’t like to say that it has made a mistake. So I’m afraid the impasse will continue.”

 ?? Kin Cheung Associated Press ?? SOLDIERS WITH the People’s Liberation Army stage a demonstrat­ion in Hong Kong. A commander referred to the Hong Kong protests as “intolerabl­e” and said the military was prepared to help maintain order.
Kin Cheung Associated Press SOLDIERS WITH the People’s Liberation Army stage a demonstrat­ion in Hong Kong. A commander referred to the Hong Kong protests as “intolerabl­e” and said the military was prepared to help maintain order.

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