The New Zealand Herald

Lam vows action to end protests

Demonstrat­ors cause commute chaos after day of violence on Hong Kong streets

- Ken Moritsugu

Protests in Hong Kong appear to have entered a dangerous new phase, with demonstrat­ors yesterday disrupting the daily commute of thousands a day after especially violent antigovern­ment protests.

Blocking streets and subway stations has been a common tactic of the anti-government protesters since the unrest began more than five months ago, but recent weeks have been marked by clashes with police, escalating vandalism against government and commercial property, and assaults by both protesters and proBeijing supporters.

On Monday, a police officer drew his gun during a struggle with protesters, shooting one in the abdomen. In another neighbourh­ood, a person was set on fire after an apparent argument. The Hong Kong hospital authority said both were in critical condition. Video of another incident showed a policeman on a motorcycle riding through a group of protesters in an apparent attempt to disperse them.

Police say those events are being investigat­ed but defend the officers’ actions as necessary for their own safety.

Hong Kong’s leader Carrie Lam pledged to “spare no effort” to halt the protests in comments likely to fuel speculatio­n that harsher legal and police measures were planned.

“I do not want to go into details, but I just want to make it very clear that we will spare no effort in finding ways and means that could end the violence in Hong Kong as soon as possible,” Lam told reporters Monday.

Lam also again refused to accept the protesters’ demands for political concession­s. “These rioters’ actions have far exceeded their demands, and they are enemies of the people,” she said.

One of their demands is for the Government to stop labelling the demonstrat­ors as rioters, which connotes that even peaceful protest is a criminal activity. Their other unmet demands are for democratic changes in Hong

Kong’s Government, criminal charges to be dropped against protesters and for police actions against the protesters to be independen­tly investigat­ed.

Following Lam’s comments on Monday, confrontat­ions between protesters and police continued into the night, with black-clad demonstrat­ors torching at least one vehicle and blocking an intersecti­on in the Mongkok district that has been the scene of many clashes. A taxi driver was taken away by ambulance with head wounds, although it wasn’t immediatel­y clear how he had been injured.

In a widely distribute­d video of the police-involved shooting on Monday, an officer shoos away a group of protesters from an intersecti­on, then drew his gun on a protester who approached him. As the two struggle, another protester in black approaches. The officer fires at the second protester, who falls to the ground. The officer appeared to fire again, but police said only one protester was hit.

It was the second police shooting of a protester since the demonstrat­ions began, although police have repeatedly drawn firearms to ward off attacks.

Police said they arrested more than 260 people on Monday, raising to 3560 the number of arrests since the movement erupted in June.

Few details were available about the burning incident in the Ma On Shan neighbourh­ood. Video posted online shows the victim arguing with a group of young people before someone douses him with a liquid and strikes a lighter.

Police fired tear gas and deployed a water cannon in parts of the city and charged onto the campus of Chinese University, where students were protesting. Online video also showed a policeman on a motorcycle riding through a group of protesters in an apparent attempt to disperse them.

The protests initially began over a proposed law that would have allowed criminal suspects to be extradited to mainland China, where they could face opaque and politicall­y sensitive trials. Activists saw the bill as another sign

of an erosion in Hong Kong’s autonomy and civic freedoms, which China promised would be maintained for 50 years under a “one nation, two systems” principle when the former British colony returned to Chinese control in 1997.

Lam eventually withdrew the extraditio­n bill but has insisted the violence stop before an further political dialogue can take place.

District council elections on November 24 are seen as a measure of public sentiment toward Hong Kong’s Government. Pro-democracy lawmakers have accused the Government of trying to provoke violence to justify cancelling or postponing the vote.

The unrest marks the worst violence in the city in decades, posing a quandary for China's leader, Xi Jinping. But the developmen­ts on Monday have led many to worry that the Government in Hong Kong may now feel justified, if not emboldened, to use ever more severe methods to put an end to the protests, once and for all.

“Senior officials have issued very draconian comments regarding the promulgati­on of a national security law and stepping up overall control,” said Willy Lam Wo-Lap, a professor of Chinese politics at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. “This, together with the death of the student protester last week, is responsibl­e for [Monday's] outbreak of disorder.”

I do not want to go into details, but I just want to make it very clear that we will spare no effort in finding ways and means that could end the violence in Hong Kong as soon as possible.

Carrie Lam

 ??  ?? Protesters were involved in clashes and demonstrat­ions late into Monday night.
Protesters were involved in clashes and demonstrat­ions late into Monday night.

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