Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Hong Kong protesters defiant

Thousands return to streets to march against election delay.

- RYAN HO KILPATRICK AND SHIBANI MAHTANI

HONG KONG — Protesters returned to the streets of Hong Kong on Sunday, the day voters were supposed to choose new city legislator­s, challengin­g the government’s decision to postpone the election for at least a year amid the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Thousands responded to anonymous calls to march in defiance of Beijing’s new national security law, which was written to put an end to exactly this kind of protest. The turnout underscore­d the anger that continues to brew in Hong Kong over the intensifyi­ng erosion of rights in the territory. Pockets of protest have reemerged in recent weeks despite the dramatical­ly higher penalties and stakes.

Police arrested hundreds Sunday, using tactics now deployed against anyone suspect- ed of sympathizi­ng with Hong Kong’s pro-democracy movement: conducting widespread stops and searches, surroundin­g and arresting protesters, and tackling even minors with force. By Sunday evening, at least 289 people were arrested, including one under the new national security law.

Calls began circulatin­g online in late August for people to march against the decision to postpone the legislativ­e elections and the security law passed by fiat in Beijing in late June. The law has effectivel­y outlawed many of the movement’s tactics and threatens those accused of broadly worded crimes such as secession, foreign collusion, subversion of state power and terrorism with life in prison. It has been used to target activists, including Jimmy Lai, the millionair­e media tycoon.

Thousands of police officers were deployed to Kowloon to prevent the protest from taking place. Roads and tunnels into the neighborho­od were blocked by traffic police, who searched incoming cars and the bags of passengers aboard buses. Hundreds of riot police thronged the march’s route and stopped and searched suspected protesters.

Protesters emerged from side streets to walk north to the bustling shopping and entertainm­ent district Mong Kok. They occasional­ly broke into chants such as “Liberate Hong Kong, revolution of our time” — now considered seditious and secessioni­st under the new law.

Police targeted protesters with pepper balls and pepper spray. They cordoned off long stretches of the street to stop and search suspected protesters. Chaos broke out when undercover police officers, walking among the protesters, tackled several to the ground and dragged them away. Protesters hurled plastic water bottles at them.

Footage circulated on social media of several officers tackling a 12-year-old girl who tried to escape a police cordon. Police said she “suddenly ran away in a suspicious manner” and officers subdued her with “minimum necessary force.”

Among the arrested were opposition politician­s with the League of Social Democrats who unfurled a banner criticizin­g the government for postponing the election. Critics say authoritie­s have delayed the vote to avoid an embarrassi­ng defeat for the pro-establishm­ent camp. Nearly three-quarters of respondent­s to a recent poll by the Hong Kong Public Opinion Research Institute said they wanted the poll to be held as soon as possible, despite the coronaviru­s.

The politician­s, like most of those arrested, were detained on suspicion of illegal assembly. Others were charged with assaulting and obstructin­g police and disorderly conduct in a public place. An officer with the Hong Kong Police Force, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss a sensitive issue, said mass arrests are a tactic frequently deployed to scare pro-democracy protesters and their sympathize­rs and deter further protests.

By evening, police closed in on the area from all sides, sweeping through to make more arrests and forcing everyone to pass through a police line to leave.

One man in his 20s said he joined the protest despite the heavy penalties “to show the world we’re still fighting and still need support.”

“It’s very important that the world continues to pay attention to what’s happening in Hong Kong, that we don’t even have the right to vote or protest anymore,” said the man, who spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisal.

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 ?? (AP/Vincent Yu) ?? A man is put into a vehicle Sunday by police officers in downtown Hong Kong, one of about 30 people reportedly arrested at protests against the government’s decision to postpone elections for the city state’s legislatur­e.
(AP/Vincent Yu) A man is put into a vehicle Sunday by police officers in downtown Hong Kong, one of about 30 people reportedly arrested at protests against the government’s decision to postpone elections for the city state’s legislatur­e.

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