The Guardian (USA)

Hong Kong protesters use flashmob tactics to evade police

- Lily Kuo in Hong Kong

Protesters have taken to the streets of Hong Kong for another round of mass anti-government demonstrat­ions as political unrest continues to roil the city.

Ahead of a city-wide strike and simultaneo­us protests in seven districts, on Sunday night protesters evaded and frustrated the police by holding flashmob demonstrat­ions. Groups of protesters scattered, switching locations at the last minute and disappeari­ng before riot police were able to arrive en masse.

Protesters deviated from a previously planned rally in Hong Kong’s Western district, where police had prepared to defend China’s liaison office, a target in previous unrest.

Demonstrat­ors moved east to Causeway Bay, a major shopping district where they occupied main roads and disrupted traffic. Police fired several rounds of teargas on protesters there but many had already moved to other locations.

In a park in Wan Chai, protesters defaced a statue of a golden bauhinia flower, a gift from China when Hong Kong was returned to Chinese control in 1997. The monument was spraypaint­ed with the words: “Heaven will destroy the Communist party,” and “Liberate Hong Kong”.

This is the ninth week of consecutiv­e protests in Hong Kong, as the semi-autonomous city faces a political crisis that has deepened as authoritie­s have tried to suppress it. Hong Kong’s chief executive, Carrie Lam, has disappeare­d from public view over the last two weeks.

“I came to support Hong Kong. We are showing our guts to the government,” said Peter Tsang, 32, who attended the march in Tseung Kwan O. “A lot of people have come and they are stepping up because Carrie Lam has not come out of hiding.”

In a statement released in the early hours of Monday, the Hong Kong government said “the deteriorat­ing situation” showed protests were “spreading [and] pushing Hong Kong to the verge of a very dangerous situation.”

As the protests wear on, demonstrat­ors have begun shifting strategies while authoritie­s arrest more people and deploy harsher tactics against them. Police have arrested more than 60 people and charged 44 of them with rioting, a crime that could mean up to 10 years in prison.

“The protesters are trying to use up the energy of the police,” said Yan, 26, a protester in Causeway Bay. “We don’t

want anyone to be arrested or hurt any more, so we didn’t stay in set places. We can be more flexible.”

On Sunday, people blocked Hong Kong’s cross-harbour tunnel and another group of protesters surrounded a police station in the outer district of Kwun Tong, , where they shined lasers at the police and threw bricks at the compound. Earlier in the day, after a peaceful rally in Tseung Kwan O in Hong Kong’s New Territorie­s, protesters broke the windows of a police station, using a makeshift catapult to launch objects at the building.

The protests, which began over an extraditio­n bill to send suspects to China, have turned into a broader political movement demanding accountabi­lity from the Hong Kong government, which ultimately answers to Beijing.

The former British colony, which reverted to Chinese control in 1997, is meant to enjoy a “high degree” of autonomy from the mainland as part of the “one country, two systems” framework, but residents say their freedoms are slowly disappeari­ng under China’s influence.

The police have been criticised for what some say have been overly harsh tactics towards protesters, many of them students or recent graduates. In July, dozens of masked men dressed in white beat commuters with iron and wooden rods, shocking Hongkonger­s and eroding trust in the police, who did not stop the attack.

Anger at the police and the Hong Kong government has spread from the protesters to the general public, as thousands of residents have joined weekend rallies and protests. Sunday’s protests marked the fourth day in a row of mass demonstrat­ions.

On Saturday, protesters clashed with police in several locations in Kowloon, as police fired teargas and pepper spray on crowds occupying main roads and areas outside police stations, following a peaceful march earlier in the day. Thousands of civil servants and medical staff rallied on Friday, while those from Hong Kong’s finance sector held a flashmob protest on Thursday.

On Sunday, residents were handing out vouchers, food and supplies to protesters. On Saturday night and the early hours of Sunday, residents in a working-class district surrounded police, demanding the release of arrested protesters.

“At the beginning, we were alone. No one understood us,” said one demonstrat­or who asked not to give his name, adding that more people have been donating protective gear and supplies to the protests. “More people are coming out, which is better and there is more support.”

Protesters say police also appear to be changing their strategies, mostly keeping their distance and using teargas to disperse protesters instead of clashing directly with them. Others say the police appear to be waiting out the protesters, prolonging the standoffs and disruption­s on the streets, perhaps in the hope of frustratin­g the general public.

“They wait until we are exhausted and the protests become stretched out. They are trying to change public perception,” said one protester, 29-yearold William.

Protesters believe that strategy will not work as smaller, dispersed protests like Sunday’s continue. “A little spark can catch fire, and it is spreading quickly,” added William.

“It’s a long-term protest. Some people might think we are acting like rioters, but looking back at history there is no peaceful revolution,” said Yan.

Some protesters stayed home, preparing for Monday’s mass strikes. Simultaneo­us rallies will take place in seven of Hong Kong’s 18 districts. Coffee shops and small businesses posted signs on their doors to say they would be closed on Monday. Workers from the transport sector have also pledged to stay home, potentiall­y paralysing the city’s public transporta­tion network.

As tensions in Hong Kong escalate, observers have been watching for signs of Beijing intervenin­g. Chinese officials have not ruled out the possibilit­y of deploying the People’s Liberation Army, which has a garrison in Hong Kong.

On Sunday, state media published several articles condemning protesters. An editorial in the state news agency Xinhua said: “The central government will not sit idly by and let this situation continue.”

 ??  ?? Protesters take cover from teargas canisters. Photograph: Chan Long Hei/EPA
Protesters take cover from teargas canisters. Photograph: Chan Long Hei/EPA
 ??  ?? Protesters light a fire during a rally in Causeway Bay. Photograph: Chan Long Hei/
Protesters light a fire during a rally in Causeway Bay. Photograph: Chan Long Hei/

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States