San Francisco Chronicle

Thousands defy Beijing, conduct vigil

- By Zen Soo and Ken Moritsugu Zen Soo and Ken Moritsugu are Associated Press writers.

HONG KONG — Thousands of people in Hong Kong defied a police ban Thursday evening, breaking through barricades to hold a candleligh­t vigil on the 31st anniversar­y of China’s crushing of a democracy movement centered on Beijing’s Tiananmen Square.

With democracy snuffed out in the mainland, the focus has shifted increasing­ly to semiautono­mous Hong Kong, where authoritie­s for the first time banned the annual vigil that remembers victims of the 1989 crackdown.

Beijing is taking a tougher stance following months of antigovern­ment protests last year, in what activists see as an accelerati­ng erosion of the city’s rights and liberties. Earlier Thursday, the Hong Kong legislatur­e passed a law making it a crime to disrespect China’s national anthem. Prodemocra­cy lawmakers disrupted proceeding twice to try to prevent the vote.

Despite the police ban, crowds poured into Victoria Park to light candles and observe a minute of silence at 8:09 p.m. Many chanted “Democracy now” and “Stand for freedom, stand with Hong Kong.”

While police played recordings warning people not to participat­e in the unauthoriz­ed gathering, they did little to stop people from entering the park. Authoritie­s had cited the need for social distancing during the coronaviru­s pandemic in barricadin­g the sprawling park, but activists saw the outbreak as a convenient excuse.

“If we don’t come out today, we don’t even know if we can still come out next year,” said participan­t Serena Cheung.

Police said they made arrests in the city’s

Mongkok district, where large crowds also rallied. When several protesters tried to block a road, officers rushed to detain them, using pepper spray and raising a blue flag to warn them to disperse or they would use force on the unauthoriz­ed gathering. On Twitter, they urged people not to gather in groups because of the coronaviru­s.

After the vigil ended in Victoria Park, groups of protesters dressed in black carried flags that said, “Liberate Hong Kong, Revolution of our times” as well as “Hong Kong Independen­ce.”

 ?? Anthony Kwan / Getty Images ?? Participan­ts raise their hands at a memorial vigil in Hong Kong to mark the 31st anniversar­y of the Tiananmen Square massacre despite a police ban.
Anthony Kwan / Getty Images Participan­ts raise their hands at a memorial vigil in Hong Kong to mark the 31st anniversar­y of the Tiananmen Square massacre despite a police ban.

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