Los Angeles Times

Foes attack Hong Kong protesters

Police try to keep a full- blown riot from erupting in the commercial center.

- By Julie Makinen julie.makinen@latimes.com Special correspond­ent Violet Law contribute­d to this report.

HONG KONG — Opponents of Hong Kong’s prodemocra­cy movement violently confronted its supporters Friday in the dense commercial district of Mong Kok, ripping down canopies, dragging away metal barricades and throwing punches as the street protests took a chaotic and bloody turn on their sixth day.

Screaming until they were red in the face, dozens of men pumped their fists and yelled “Get out!” while urging police to clear protesters fromthe intersecti­on of Nathan Road and Argyle Street, a dense commercial center that has been blocked off for days.

“Calm down!” “Protect the students!” members of the pro- democracy camp yelled in return, some youths bursting into tears.

Hundreds of police were dispatched to the scene, struggling to keep the situation from erupting in to a full blown riot as water bottles were lobbed and curses hurled. Dozens of people suffered scrapes, bruises and other injuries, but the student- led demonstrat­ors held on at the site. The confrontat­ions began in the early afternoon and the situation remained tense late into the night. Two people were arrested.

It was not immediatel­y clear whether the opponents represente­d a spontaneou­s objection among residents to the protesters, who have filled the streets and disrupted commerce. Several politician­s who have supported the democracy protests said they believed the opponents had links to the Triad criminal gangs.

The chaotic scenes were a new shock to the public in this semiautono­mous Chinese territory, which has a long tradition of orderly and peaceful public protests. The fistfights and growing inconvenie­nce could undermine public support for the democracy movement.

“We need to eat; these protests are just a game!” shouted one woman at the Mong Kok confrontat­ion. A woman interviewe­d by local TV complained, “I have had to care for my daughter by myself all week” because her school has been closed.

But the confrontat­ions seemed to steel the resolve of the democracy movement’s supporters, who just hours earlier had appeared dejected and divided after a leading student protest group, the Hong Kong Federation of Students, said it had agreed to hold talks with government officials about their demands.

The protesters are angry in part that Chinese leaders, who have said Hong Kong voters can for the first time cast ballots in 2017 for the chief executive post, want to limit voters’ choices to two or three candidates who pass muster with Beijing.

After nightfall Friday, the federation said in a statement that, after the violence, itwas suspending its plan to sit down with officials, accusing police of not doing enough to protect pro- democracy demonstrat­ors.

“This is just as bad as the previous use of violence [ by police] to clear occupied areas,” the organizati­on said, referring to officers’ use of tear gas Sunday night against demonstrat­ors.

Hong Kong Chief Executive Leung Chun- ying appealed to the public to leave the area so that order could be restored, but police refrained from clearing it by force. “This is approachin­g a state of anarchy,” he said.

Rumors circulated that at least some opponents of the protests were hired thugs and that some were from mainland China.

“Instigator­s have attacked our supporters with malice,” said Benny Tai, a founder of the pro- democracy group Occupy Central With Love and Peace.

Added Chan Kin- man, another Occupy organizer, “On the one hand the officials want to have a dialogue, but on the other hand mobs are attacking our supporters. Then where is the sincerity to have a dialogue? Wewant to knowif this is the doing of the entire administra­tion or of C. Y. Leung.”

At a news conference, police said the counter- demonstrat­ors had no connection with Triad gangs or government groups.

Earlier Friday, the Hong Kong government closed its central office and asked civil servants to work from home or alternativ­e locations as a sit- in continued around Leung’s office building and pro- democracy demonstrat­ors blocked a key thoroughfa­re, Lung Wo Road, which has been the only main eastwest artery open in recent days on Hong Kong island.

A government spokesman condemned the protesters for blocking police attempts to deliver food and water to officers stationed in government buildings. A statement suggested that the demonstrat­ions were being directed not by student leaders or the Occupy Central movement but by “radical social activists.”

Protesters rejected those allegation­s and lashed out at police for not doing more to control the situation in Mong Kok.

Mark Ledford, a tourist from Orange County, spent the afternoon taking in the scene at the intersecti­on. “I don’t have politics when I’m on vacation, I like to say,” said Ledford, who runs a kids’ sports center in Rancho Santa Margarita and experience­d tear gas earlier in the week when police clashed with protesters. “But I support what the students are doing out here.”

As a business owner, Ledford said, he understand­s that some Hong Kong shop owners might be upset about the demonstrat­ions’ effect on their business, but ultimately, he said, the foundation­s of enterprise depend on the kind of democratic principles the protesters are seeking.

Where the movement goes from here — and how the conflict will be resolved — remains murky. Even if talks are held, it’s unclear whether demonstrat­ors will accept a compromise.

“We don’t really have one strong leader,” a 24- year- old air traffic controller at Mong Kok said Friday night, refusing to give her name for fear she could face reprisal at work. “SoI think it is hard for them to negotiate effectivel­y.”

Still, she said, taking note of the throng of foreign reporters at the intersecti­on, “if all this accomplish­es is showing theworld the difference between Hong Kong and China, then that’s a good thing.”

 ?? Philippe Lopez
AFP/ Getty Images ?? POLICEMEN ATTEMPT to pry a pro- democracy protester away from a fence in Hong Kong. Opponents of the demonstrat­ors screamed at them to leave the streets, and some threw punches.
Philippe Lopez AFP/ Getty Images POLICEMEN ATTEMPT to pry a pro- democracy protester away from a fence in Hong Kong. Opponents of the demonstrat­ors screamed at them to leave the streets, and some threw punches.

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