Dayton Daily News

Riot police, protesters clash briefly at Hong Kong airport

- By Yanan Wang and Katie Tam

— Riot police HONG KONG clashed briefly with pro-democracy protesters at Hong Kong’s airport Tuesday night in a chaotic end to a second day of demonstrat­ions that caused mass cancellati­ons and disruption­s at the Chinese city’s busy transport hub.

Calm eventually returned, with most of the protesters leaving the airport hours after officers armed with pepper spray and swinging batons tried to enter the terminal, fighting with demonstrat­ors who barricaded entrances with luggage carts. Protesters said they planned to return to the airport early Wednesday.

The burst of violence also included protesters beating at least two men they suspected of being undercover agents and came the same day Hong Kong’s pro-Beijing leader warned that the demonstrat­ors had pushed events onto a “path of no return,” highlighti­ng the hardening positions on both sides.

Police took away several people they caught outside the arrival hall and eventually retreated.

Police said they were trying to help ambulance officers reach an injured man whom protesters had cornered and detained for about two hours on suspicion of being an undercover agent from mainland China. Rescuers eventually succeeded in getting him to an ambulance, local broadcaste­r RTHK reported.

Protesters then detained and beat a second man whom they also suspected of being an undercover agent.

After a brief period when planes were able to take off and land early in the day, authoritie­s were forced to cancel the remaining flights. The airport authority suspended check-in services for departing flights as of 4:30 p.m., with departing flights that had completed the process able to continue to operate.

The airport’s website showed at least 120 cancellati­ons and it advised people not to come to the airport, one of the world’s busiest.

More than 200 flights were canceled Monday and passengers were forced to stay in the city while airlines tried to find other ways to get them to their destinatio­ns.

The airport disruption­s escalated a summer of demonstrat­ions aimed at what many Hong Kong residents see as an increasing erosion of the freedoms they were promised in 1997 when Communist Party-ruled mainland China took over what had been a British colony.

The protests have built on an opposition movement that shut down much of the city for seven weeks in 2014 before it eventually fizzled and its leaders were jailed on public disturbanc­e charges.

The central government in Beijing has ominously characteri­zed the current protest movement as something approachin­g “terrorism” that poses an “existentia­l threat” to citizens.

While Beijing tends to define terrorism broadly, extending it especially to nonviolent movements opposing government policies in minority regions such as Tibet and Xinjiang, its use of the term in relation to Hong Kong raised the prospect of greater violence and the possible suspension of legal rights for those detained.

Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam said the instabilit­y, chaos and violence have placed the city on a “path of no return.”

The black-clad demonstrat­ors have shown no sign of letting up on their campaign to force Lam’s administra­tion to respond to their demands, including that she step down and scrap proposed legislatio­n under which some suspects could be sent to mainland China, where critics say they could face torture and unfair or politicall­y charged trials.

Lam has rejected calls for dialogue, part of what analysts say is a strategy to wear down the opposition movement through police action while prompting demonstrat­ors to take more violent and extreme actions that will turn the public against them. At the airport, protesters discussed among themselves whether they should simply block all access to the facility.

Meanwhile, paramilita­ry police were assembling across the border in the city of Shenzhen for exercises that some saw as a threat to increase force against the mostly young protesters who have turned out by the thousands in the past 10 weeks.

 ?? LAM YIK FEI / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Protesters jam the Hong Kong Internatio­nal Airport on Tuesday. The airport suspended check-ins for a second straight day as protesters again disrupted its operations, hours after the city’s embattled leader pleaded for order.
LAM YIK FEI / THE NEW YORK TIMES Protesters jam the Hong Kong Internatio­nal Airport on Tuesday. The airport suspended check-ins for a second straight day as protesters again disrupted its operations, hours after the city’s embattled leader pleaded for order.

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