Baltimore Sun

Hong Kong protests flare despite bill’s withdrawal

- By Kin Cheung

HONG KONG — Hong Kong protesters besieged a police station and a subway stop Friday, prompting police to fire tear gas and rubber bullets as new violence erupted despite the government’s promise to drop a proposed law that sparked months of demonstrat­ions in the semiautono­mous Chinese territory.

About 2,000 angry protesters surrounded the police station in the crowded, working-class district of Mong Kok late Friday for a second straight night, demanding accountabi­lity over a violent police raid on the nearby Prince Edward subway station on Aug. 31.

Police set up barriers at the entrance of the police station and later fired tear gas and rubber bullets to ward off the crowd, many of whom wore masks and used umbrellas to shield themselves.

Rumors have been circulatin­g on social media accusing police of covering up the alleged death of a protester during the earlier raid at the subway station. Videos taken then show police swinging batons and shooting pepper spray at people inside a stopped train. Protesters want surveillan­ce camera recordings of the raid to be released.

The demonstrat­ors retreated after riot police confronted them with more tear gas but refused to leave. Some set off street fires with piles of carton boxes while others used sticks and metal rods to smash traffic lights and the metal roofing at another subway stop.

Authoritie­s were earlier forced to shut the Prince Edward subway station during the evening rush hour after demonstrat­ors protested there against the alleged police violence.

Separately, more than 1,000 people gathered Friday night at a public park near Hong Kong’s legislativ­e complex, chanting “Fight for freedom.” Medical workers rallied earlier at the office of the hospital authority.

Hong Kong l eader Carrie Lam announced two days ago that her government will formally withdraw an extraditio­n bill that would have allowed Hong Kong residents to be sent to mainland China for trial. Many saw it as a glaring example of the city’s eroding autonomy since the former British colony returned to Chinese control in 1997.

The protest movement was triggered by the extraditio­n bill, but the focus has since shifted to alleged excessive use of force by police in the violent clashes and to other issues.

Protesters have adopted a new slogan: “Five key demands, not one less.” They want an independen­t investigat­ion into the allegation­s of police brutality, the unconditio­nal release of those detained, no more labeling of the protests as riots, and direct elections of the city’s leaders.

Lam has rejected those demands, saying a police watchdog agency investigat­ing police misconduct was credible. Critics say the agency is led by her allies and doesn’t have the power to summon witnesses.

Police say they have used the minimum amount of force necessary to quell riotous demonstrat­ions. The city is bracing for more protests over the weekend, including reported plans to target the airport again on Saturday.

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