Santa Fe New Mexican

Hong Kong protesters hurl gasoline bombs

- By Mike Ives, Elaine Yu and Ezra Cheung

HONG KONG — Black-clad protesters hurled gasoline bombs at government offices in central Hong Kong on Sunday, as a day that began with a peaceful march by tens of thousands of pro-democracy demonstrat­ors descended into clouds of tear gas deployed by police and ugly brawls between civilians.

Police also used water cannons after protesters vandalized a subway station and hurled bricks and gasoline bombs at a complex of government buildings that includes the city’s Legislatur­e during a weekend that revealed the extent to which three months of pro-democracy demonstrat­ions have frayed the city’s social fabric.

The South China Morning Post reported that at least one man who was attacked by a mob of black-clad protesters Sunday was in serious condition. Video footage showed several men being taken away on stretchers or treated by paramedics after an evening of fistfights and street brawls between people on opposing sides of the city’s yawning political divide.

The turnout at the march Sunday was lower than that of similar ones this summer, but the violence over the weekend highlighte­d the staying power and raw anger of a movement that has produced 15 consecutiv­e weekends of unrest in an otherwise orderly financial hub.

The tumult across the city came just over two weeks before a major political moment Oct. 1: the 70th anniversar­y of the founding of modern China. A key question is what protesters will do on that date and how Beijing and the Hong Kong police will respond.

“I don’t think the government will be able to respond to our demands by Oct. 1, so people will keep fighting for what they want,” Cheng Sui-ting, 27, an environmen­tal educator, said at Sunday’s march, which began in the Causeway Bay shopping district and quickly stopped traffic.

Carrie Lam, Hong Kong’s beleaguere­d leader, said early this month that she would formally withdraw the contentiou­s extraditio­n bill that prompted the initial protests in June and led to the territory’s worst political crisis since it returned to Chinese control in 1997.

But mass rallies have continued, in part because the movement’s demands have gradually expanded to include broad calls for political reform, including universal suffrage and an independen­t inquiry into allegation­s of police brutality.

Early Sunday afternoon, protesters began marching west from the shopping district of Causeway Bay toward Admiralty, an area that includes many government offices and the Hong Kong headquarte­rs of the Chinese military. Some confronted police officers who were stationed on a footbridge near the police headquarte­rs. “Corrupt cops,” they chanted, “may your whole family die!”

Others occupied a major road in Admiralty, piling traffic barricades inside a nearby train station and across one of its entrances. A few used metal poles and umbrellas to smash some of the station’s glass railings. Police responded by blanketing the streets with tear gas, spraying arcs of blue-dyed water from cannons and deploying riot police officers to chase protesters from the area. Many demonstrat­ors headed eastward, where they built more barricades and set a fire outside the Wan Chai subway station, between Causeway Bay and Admiralty.

Chris Cheung, a 22-year-old student who was helping to reinforce a makeshift barricade at an exit to Admiralty Station, said protesters were deliberate­ly targeting the city’s subway operator, MTR Corp., for having allowed police to beat protesters inside a station in late August.

If Hong Kong citizens “have a conscience,” he added, “they would have watched the news and seen how people got beaten and understood our perspectiv­e.”

In the last three months, protesters have been tear gassed by police and attacked by gangs of men widely thought to be linked to organized crime syndicates. Yet by plunging into vandalism and street brawls, they risk squanderin­g some of the wide support they receive from the Hong Kong public.

Ray Siu, a 33-year-old constructi­on worker who has joined the protests, said he felt that while attacking the MTR was acceptable, attacking shops or people at random would bring a different reaction. “We haven’t crossed that line yet,” he added.

The weekend started with fistfights Saturday in at least two areas of Hong Kong, apparently after protesters confronted government supporters who were vandalizin­g the so-called Lennon Walls that the movement has set up across the city for pro-democracy messages and artwork.

At one point Saturday, scuffling broke out in the Fortress Hill neighborho­od of Hong Kong Island near the site of a vandalized Lennon Wall. Video footage showed men using Chinese flags to beat other men, presumably pro-democracy demonstrat­ors, in the middle of a busy road.

 ?? LAM YIK FEI/NEW YORK TIMES ?? Protesters force open the entrance of the Causeway Bay subway station Sunday in Hong Kong. Demonstrat­ors hurled gasoline bombs at government offices in central Hong Kong, as a day that began with a peaceful march by tens of thousands of prodemocra­cy demonstrat­ors descended into clouds of tear gas deployed by the police and ugly brawls between civilians.
LAM YIK FEI/NEW YORK TIMES Protesters force open the entrance of the Causeway Bay subway station Sunday in Hong Kong. Demonstrat­ors hurled gasoline bombs at government offices in central Hong Kong, as a day that began with a peaceful march by tens of thousands of prodemocra­cy demonstrat­ors descended into clouds of tear gas deployed by the police and ugly brawls between civilians.

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