Santa Fe New Mexican

Hong Kong protesters defy China warnings

- By Andrew Higgins, Katherine Li and Ezra Cheung

HONG KONG — Defying warnings from China of a crackdown if they continued more than two months of protests, young demonstrat­ors blocked a vital tunnel under Hong Kong’s Victoria Harbor on Saturday, barricaded a traffic intersecti­on and set fires outside a police station in a shopping district popular with tourists.

The Hong Kong police force said in a statement that the fires in the Tsim Sha Tsui district of the city posed “a serious threat to the safety of everyone at the scene.”

Police officers fired tear gas in several locations as a day that began with a show of peaceful defiance outside the headquarte­rs of China’s military garrison descended into an evening of clashes, panic and widespread disruption.

Thousands of activists continued a sit-in at Hong Kong’s internatio­nal airport, one of the world’s busiest air-travel hubs, on the second day of what they said would be a three-day occupation. The airport demonstrat­ion, unlike scattered and oftenchaot­ic protests on the Kowloon Peninsula on Saturday evening, has so far been peaceful.

Stores along Nathan Road, normally crowded with evening shoppers and tourists, closed their doors as police moved into the area, charging into passers-by caught up in a melee that was shrouded in clouds of tear gas.

Amy Havart, a 32-year-old Hong Kong resident, said she had been leaving a hotel on Nathan Road after drinks with friends when hotel staff members “told us that the police are dropping tear gas outside; we don’t know what is happening at all.”

She said she could not see any protesters or acts of violence so could not understand why there were so many police officers.

“We are all just here trying to have some fun tonight. So why are the police here?” she asked. “I don’t know what is happening to this city. This is just heartbreak­ing to see.”

Assailed for days by China’s propaganda machine as violent thugs who must be stopped, Hong Kong’s protest movement — a largely leaderless jumble of groups and causes — started the day with a display of what activists say was their peaceful intent. Several thousand people marched in an orderly procession past China’s military headquarte­rs in the former British colony.

That protest march in Central District, billed by organizers as a “family friendly” event, featured parents, baby strollers and children with balloons, and avoided incendiary slogans about “retaking Hong Kong” that have angered China’s governing Communist Party.

“Xi Jinping should come and take a look at us here, now, and then say whether we are hooligans,” said Ina Wong, a 34-yearold designer, referring to China’s hard-line leader. Wong took part in the rally along with her husband, a civil servant, and their 2-year-old son.

But the mood turned grimmer as darkness fell and the Kowloon Peninsula, across Victoria Harbor, became the focus for a new round of protests, which, unlike the morning rally in Central, had not been authorized by the police.

The number of protesters was far below the huge demonstrat­ions last month, and Saturday evening’s events in Kowloon were driven largely by groups of a few hundred activists who roamed from area to area in an effort to avoid arrest for participat­ion in an unauthoriz­ed gathering. After one group blocked a tunnel under the harbor from Kowloon to Central in the early evening, a different group occupied the entrance to the Lion Rock Tunnel, under a mountain in Kowloon.

The blocking of roads and tunnels recalled some of the disarray that convulsed Hong Kong on Monday, when a wave of protest rallies and strikes bought much of the city to a standstill, with the police and demonstrat­ors clashing in several areas. Monday’s unrest prompted a barrage of warnings from the Communist Party in Beijing and its allies in Hong Kong that further unrest would not be tolerated.

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