New York Post

'Hong Kong' unrest in NYC

‘Pros’ & ‘cons’ letting it all shout

- By EILEEN AJ CONNELLY, NICK FUGALLO and JON LEVINE With Wires econnelly@nypost.com

Weeks of political unrest roiling the streets of Hong Kong reached across the globe to New York on Saturday, where hundreds of people filled lower Manhattan streets demonstrat­ing noisily but peacefully.

As crowds of pro-democracy protesters marched through Hong Kong for the 10th consecutiv­e week, and pro-government supporters held their own rallies, those who support one or the other camps gathered at Bowery and Division Street.

“There’s injustice in Hong Kong. If they want freedom, then they deserve freedom. Especially when China isn’t offering help or reform,” Jenny Kim, 24, of Park Slope, Brooklyn, told The Post.

Kim was one of roughly 500 people who came out to show solidarity with counterpar­ts in the embattled city. Many of the marchers chanted and held signs including, “We Fight For Our Freedom” and “Stand With Hong Kong.”

On the opposing side, a smaller but no less impassione­d crowd urged protesters to work with the mainland Chinese Communist government. “They’re making China out to be the bad people here. It’s just the law. We just want to go back to living like we used to before these riots,” Henry Wong, 47, of Chinatown, told The Post.

Many protesters who came out for Beijing used the nationalis­t rallying cry “One China” and held signs urging spectators to “Stop Demoniz[ing] China” and “Stop Biased Fake News.”

The event was peaceful, with about a dozen NYPD officers on hand to keep order and direct traffic. No arrests or injuries were reported as of Saturday evening.

Back in Hong Kong, dueling demonstrat­ors marched past shuttered shops as worries grow that Chinese authoritie­s will step in to quell the outcry if local police don’t.

China’s ambassador to the United Kingdom, Liu Xiaoming, told the BBC Beijing could “quell any unrest swiftly” if it wanted to do so.

Tensions were heightened when members of China’s paramilita­ry People’s Armed Police practiced crowd-control tactics at a sports complex in Shenzhen, across the harbor from Hong Kong, on Friday in what some saw as a threat against protesters in the semiautono­mous territory.

On Saturday, pro-democracy crowds made their way along Hong Kong’s famous harbor demanding the resignatio­n of Chief Executive Carrie Lam, as well as democratic elections and an independen­t investigat­ion of police force used against demonstrat­ors.

Earlier in the day, thousands of teachers marched to Lam’s official residence, where they carried signs reading “protect the next generation” and tied white ribbons to the metal fence.

“We want to protect our students, our youngsters, so teachers are willing to come out and speak for the youngsters and also to stand by them so they are not alone,” said Fung Wai-wah, president of the Hong Kong Profession­al Teachers Union, which organized the march.

“The government right now doesn’t listen to the people, and the police are too violent,” said Bobby Tse, 76. a retiree who watched the pro-democracy march from a bridge.

“It didn’t used to be like this. We didn’t have to protest every week. But now, even though we have protests every week, the government still gives no response.”

Meanwhile, pro-government demonstrat­ors expressed love for Hong Kong and China and posed for photos with police officers.

 ??  ?? TENSE: Demonstrat­ors who support the ongoing fight for democracy in Hong Kong trade barbs with a pro-Communist crowd (below) downtown Saturday.
TENSE: Demonstrat­ors who support the ongoing fight for democracy in Hong Kong trade barbs with a pro-Communist crowd (below) downtown Saturday.
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