Mindanao Times

Hong Kong police slam HQ protest as ‘illegal, irrational’

- Agence FrancePres­se

HONG Kong police on Saturday slammed anti-government protesters for besieging their headquarte­rs, calling the demonstrat­ion “illegal and irrational” as they vowed to pursue the ringleader­s.

“Police have shown the greatest tolerance of protesters who assembled outside PHQ (police headquarte­rs) but their means of expressing views has become illegal, irrational and unreasonab­le,” the city’s police said in a statement.

“Police will stringentl­y follow up on these illegal activities.”

Thousands of protesters blockaded the police headquarte­rs throughout Friday and into the small hours of Saturday morning, the latest manifestat­ion of angry demonstrat­ions sweeping the city.

The internatio­nal finance hub has been rocked by the worst political unrest since its 1997 handover to China.

Millions have marched this month to oppose a proposed law that would have allowed extraditio­ns to the Chinese mainland.

Officers had used tear gas and rubber bullets last week to clear protesters during a massive demonstrat­ion outside the city’s parliament, sparking widespread anger against the police force.

The spark for the current wave of protests was the extraditio­n bill, which the city’s pro-Beijing leader Carrie Lam has postponed in the face of the huge public backlash.

But the demonstrat­ions have since morphed into a wider movement against Lam’s administra­tion and party leaders in Beijing after years of sliding political freedoms.

Police have also become a focus of protester anger.

During Friday’s demonstrat­ions outside their headquarte­rs, large crowds of protesters blockaded entrances, taped over CCTV cameras and shouted at police.

Many chanted “release the righteous” and “shame on police thugs” -- references to those detained during violence last week between demonstrat­ors and

the police.

Officers remained inside their fortified building throughout.

The protest was noisy but peaceful -- with the exception of some thrown eggs and demonstrat­ors shining laser pens at the windows. The crowds eventually dispersed around 4:00 am (2000 GMT Friday).

Police said some 60 emergency calls could not be “immediatel­y handled” because of the blockade and that 13 members of staff were “sent to hospital for treatment”.

The statement did not say how the staff were injured.

Opposition groups have demanded an investigat­ion into allegation­s of police brutality and the release of those detained during the clashes, in addition to Lam’s ouster and the permanent cancellati­on of the extraditio­n bill.

Rights group Amnesty Internatio­nal said Friday it had verified multiple instances of police violence that breached internatio­nal laws while the Hong Kong Bar Associatio­n added its voice to calls for an investigat­ion into police tactics.

Police have defended using tear gas and rubber bullets on 12 June as a necessary and proportion­ate response to meet violent protesters who were trying to break into the city’s parliament.

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