Calgary Herald

Hong Kong cracks down on protesters

- KELVIN CHAN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

HONG KONG — Pro- democracy demonstrat­ors defied onslaughts of tear gas and appeals from Hong Kong’s top leader to go home, as the protests over Beijing’s decision to limit political reforms expanded across the city Monday.

Hong Kong’s chief executive, Leung Chun- ying, reassured the public that rumours the Chinese army might intervene were untrue.

“I hope the public will keep calm. Don’t be misled by the rumours. Police will strive to maintain social order, including ensuring smooth traffic and ensuring the public safety,” said the Beijing- backed Leung, who is deeply unpopular. He added, “When they carry out their duties, they will use their maximum discretion.”

Protesters spent the night on the pavement, some flat on their backs asleep, others milling around as they watched for police. The sit- ins spread from the financial district, near the government headquarte­rs, to other areas of Hong Kong in the strongest challenge yet to Beijing’s decision to limit democratic reforms for the semi- autonomous city.

Three districts, Wan Chai, Admiralty and Central, are visited by tens of millions of tourists each year.

As dawn broke, crowds continued to block roads leading to the heart of the financial centre and besiege the government’s headquarte­rs one subway stop to the east. New protests sprung up overnight in the shopping districts of Causeway Bay and Mongkok, with hundreds sitting in the road and erecting barricades.

The scenes of billowing tear gas and riot police outfitted with longbarrel­led weapons, rare for this affluent Asian financial hub, are highlighti­ng the authoritie­s’ inability to assuage public discontent over Beijing’s rejection last month of open nomination­s for candidates under proposed guidelines for the first elections for Hong Kong’s leader, promised for 2017.

Authoritie­s announced some traffic controls and said some schools in areas near the main protest site would be closed, as Leung urged people to go home, obey the law and avoid causing trouble.

“We don’t want Hong Kong to be messy,” Leung said in a statement that was broadcast Monday.

After spending hours holding protesters at bay, police lobbed canisters of tear gas into the crowd on Sunday evening. The searing fumes sent demonstrat­ors fleeing, though many came right back. The government said 26 people were taken to hospitals; some were carried away on stretchers.

The protests began with sit- ins over a week earlier by students urging Beijing to grant genuine democratic reforms to this former British colony.

“This is a long fight. I hope the blockade will continue tomorrow, so the whole thing will be meaningful,” said 19- year- old Edward Yau, 19, a business and law student. “The government has to understand that we have the ability to undo it if they continue to treat us like we are terrorists.”

When China took control of Hong Kong from the British in 1997, it agreed to a policy of “one country, two systems” that allowed the city a high degree of control over its own affairs and kept in place liberties unseen on the mainland. It also promised the city’s leader would eventually be chosen through “universal suffrage.”

Hong Kong’s residents have long felt their city stood apart from mainland China thanks to those civil liberties and separate legal and financial systems.

Beijing’s insistence on using a committee to screen candidates on the basis of their patriotism to China — similar to the one that currently hand- picks Hong Kong’s leaders — has stoked fears among pro- democracy groups that Hong Kong will never get genuine democracy.

 ?? Xaume Olleros/ AFP/ Getty Images ?? Pro- democracy demonstrat­ors are doused with pepper spray Sunday as they clash with police near Hong Kong government headquarte­rs. Thousands of demonstrat­ors brought central Hong Kong to a standstill.
Xaume Olleros/ AFP/ Getty Images Pro- democracy demonstrat­ors are doused with pepper spray Sunday as they clash with police near Hong Kong government headquarte­rs. Thousands of demonstrat­ors brought central Hong Kong to a standstill.

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