The Korea Times

Hong Kong protests

Mainland security forces garrisoned in city engage with protesters for 1st time

- Reuters-Yonhap

Riot police clash with anti-government protesters during a demonstrat­ion in the Causeway Bay district of Hong Kong, Sunday. Hong Kong authoritie­s brought the first charges against protesters Monday under a new anti-mask law that went into effect Friday, designed to end the four months of protests, but which only inflamed tensions across the city.

HONG KONG (Reuters) — Chinese soldiers issued a warning to Hong Kong protesters on Sunday who shone lasers at their barracks in the city, in the first direct interactio­n with mainland military forces in four months of anti-government demonstrat­ions.

The stand-off with the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) came after rallies attended by tens of thousands of protesters earlier on Sunday ended in violent clashes in several locations. Police fired tear gas and baton-charged the crowds, while some demonstrat­ors threw bricks and petrol bombs at police as night fell.

Protesters concealed their faces in defiance of colonial-era emergency laws invoked by the authoritie­s on Friday, which banned face masks. Protesters face a maximum of one year in jail for breaking the mask ban.

Police made their first arrests under the new rules, detaining scores of people. Officers tied their wrists with cable and unmasked their faces before placing them on buses. Some protesters lay in foetal positions on the ground, their wrists tied behind their backs, after being subdued with pepper spray and batons.

“The anti-mask law just fuels our anger and more will people come on to the street,” Lee, a university student wearing a blue mask, said on Sunday, as he marched on Hong Kong island.

“We are not afraid of the new law, we will continue fighting. We will fight for righteousn­ess. I put on the mask to tell the government that I’m not afraid of tyranny.”

China’s Hong Kong military garrison warned a crowd of a few hundred protesters they could be arrested for targeting its barracks walls in the city with laser lights. It was the first direct interactio­n between the PLA and protesters. Chinese military personnel standing on the roof of the building held up a sign in English and Chinese which read: “Warning. You are in breach of the law. You may be prosecuted.”

The troops in fatigues also shone spotlights on the crowd and used binoculars and cameras to monitor protesters. The protesters eventually dispersed.

In August, Beijing moved thousands of troops across the border into Hong Kong in an operation state news agency Xinhua described at the time as a routine “rotation.”

But the PLA has remained in barracks since protests started, leaving Hong Kong’s police force to deal with the massive and often violent protests in the Asian financial hub.

The PLA’s top brass has warned violence is “absolutely impermissi­ble.”

Authoritie­s had braced for two major protests on Sunday, fearing a recurrence of Friday night’s violent protests which saw the Asian financial center virtually shut down the next day.

Only hours after Hong Kong’s embattled leader Carrie Lam invoked emergency powers last used more than 50 years ago, mask-wearing protesters took to the streets on Friday, setting subway stations on fire, smashing mainland China banks and clashing with police.

The rallies on Sunday on Hong Kong island and across the harbor in Kowloon had been largely peaceful until police began to try and disperse the crowds, saying they were participat­ing in unlawful assemblies, blocking major roads, and ordered protesters to leave immediatel­y.

Hong Kong’s four months of protests have plunged the Chinese-ruled city into its worst political crisis in decades and pose the biggest popular challenge to Chinese President Xi Jinping since he came to power six years ago.

Protesters handed out face masks to encourage people to defy the ban. As the day wore on protesters started to target subway stations and China banks, just as they did on Friday, which forced the unpreceden­ted closure of the city’s metro railway.

A branch of China Constructi­on Bank (Asia) near Prince Edward station was vandalized on Sunday with “No China” sprayed on it’s wall. Wan Chai station, closed with a neon sign saying serious vandalism, had a protester sheet draped over it which read: “this way to HELL.”

Protesters set alight a blaze at the Mong Kok MTR station, with a placard nearby reading: “If we burn, you burn with us.”

The current “precarious situation”, which endangered public safety, left no timely solution but the anti-mask law, Matthew Cheung, Hong Kong’s chief secretary, wrote on his blog on Sunday. He urged people to oppose violence ahead of grassroots district council elections set for Nov. 24.

Taxi driver beaten after plowing into protesters

A taxi in Hong Kong plowed through a group of pro-democracy protesters who retaliated by beating the driver Sunday.

The taxi drove onto a pedestrian walkway outside the Cheung Sha Wan government offices and crashed into a storefront, striking demonstrat­ors and injuring at least one woman about 5 p.m. Sunday.

Large crowds surrounded the taxi driver and began to beat him while other protesters attempted to protect him.

Firefighte­rs responded to provide first aid to the woman and the driver who was transporte­d away from the scene in an ambulance.

The taxi was later found with its windows broken, license plate spray-painted and objects from the interior thrown outside.

The Hong Kong Hospital authority said four people were hospitaliz­ed in the aftermath of the crash and three were in serious condition, including the driver.

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 ?? AFP-Yonhap ?? Rescuers attend a taxi driver who was beaten by protesters after his car ran over various protesters in a crowd enclosing the taxi during the Anti-ERO (Emergency Regulation­s Ordinance) demonstrat­ion against a newly imposed law banning face masks in public in Hong Kong, Sunday.
AFP-Yonhap Rescuers attend a taxi driver who was beaten by protesters after his car ran over various protesters in a crowd enclosing the taxi during the Anti-ERO (Emergency Regulation­s Ordinance) demonstrat­ion against a newly imposed law banning face masks in public in Hong Kong, Sunday.
 ?? Reuters-Yonhap ?? A People’s Liberation Army soldier holds a yellow banner to warn anti-government protesters during a demonstrat­ion following the government’s ban on face masks under emergency law, outside Osborn Barracks in Hong Kong, Sunday.
Reuters-Yonhap A People’s Liberation Army soldier holds a yellow banner to warn anti-government protesters during a demonstrat­ion following the government’s ban on face masks under emergency law, outside Osborn Barracks in Hong Kong, Sunday.

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