Mindanao Times

Marchers defy HK cops

- BY SU XINQI AND CATHERINE LAI

HONG Kong police fired tear gas and water cannon Saturday as thousands of democracy protesters defied authoritie­s in another unsanction­ed march after Beijing vowed to tighten control over the restless city.

Commercial districts on the main island turned into a battlegrou­nd as crowds of black-clad protesters, many wearing face masks despite a recent ban, clashed for hours with riot police.

Hardcore protesters hurled bricks and petrol bombs and vandalised multiple subway stations and businesses perceived to be pro-China -- including the office of China’s state-run Xinhua news agency, which had its windows smashed.

Police responded with sustained volleys of tear gas, scattering protesters with water cannon trucks and making dozens of arrests.

After one clash an AFP reporter saw around 100 people being taken away in three coaches.

Among those caught up in the tear-gas clouds were rugby fans who had gathered in bars in Wanchai district to watch the World Cup final.

Hours later revellers in a nightclub district had a similar experience as party-goers scrambled for cover and bars shut their windows.

A medical volunteer in the crowd was burned when a tear-gas canister struck him on his back, footage showed.

By evening, the clashes had moved across the harbour to Mongkok and Tsim Sha Tsui, two areas that have seen regular skirmishes in recent months.

In a statement, Xinhua condemned the “barbaric acts” of the protesters who targeted their office.

The latest unrest came after China warned on Friday that it would not tolerate any challenge to Hong Kong’s governing system and planned to boost patriotic education in the city, which has seen 22 consecutiv­e weekends of youth-led protests.

Hong Kong has been upended by the huge, often violent, pro-democracy protests which have battered the financial hub’s reputation for stability and helped plunge the city into recession.

Beijing has shown no willingnes­s to meet protester demands for greater democratic freedoms and police accountabi­lity -- and activists show no sign of leaving the streets.

“The government and the police have been ignoring and suppressin­g the people’s demands so we need to continue the movement to show them we still want what we are asking for,” 18-year-old protester Gordon Tsoi, who was not wearing a mask, told AFP as he marched.

“The entire government is being controlled by the central government now, so we have to come out to protect the freedoms we deserve,” added another 17-year-old protester who declined to give his name.

Police had rejected an applicatio­n for an afternoon march, citing safety fears. But as often in the past, protesters simply defied the ban with thousands turning up before the clashes began.

After months of unrest, ideologica­l polarisati­on has exploded with protesters taunting police and officers returning the disdain.

In one video from Saturday, officers could be heard shouting that protesters were “cockroache­s” and “sub-human”. Protesters routinely call police “triads”.

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