San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Police seize explosives ahead of major civil rights march

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HONG KONG — Police in Hong Kong discovered a stash of a powerful homemade explosive as the semiautono­mous Chinese city readied for another major prodemocra­cy rally Sunday.

Police said they found 4.4 pounds of TATP and arrested a man in a raid on a commercial building late Friday. TATP, or triacetone triperoxid­e, has been used in terrorist attacks worldwide.

Materials voicing opposition to an extraditio­n bill that has sparked more than a month of demonstrat­ions in Hong Kong were found at the site, local media said, but a police spokesman said no concrete link has been establishe­d and that the investigat­ion is continuing.

In a rally that aimed to counter the prodemocra­cy movement, thousands of people filled a park in central Hong Kong on Saturday to support the police, who have been accused of using excessive force on protesters. Some waved Chinese flags, and a giant screen behind the stage for speakers read “Safeguard Hong Kong.”

Many wore white, heeding a call by organizers, and the demonstrat­ors did not wear masks or helmets, public broadcaste­r RTHK said. The antiextrad­ition law activists wear black and don protective gear against police pepper spray and batons.

Organizers said 316,000 people took part in the demonstrat­ion, while police put the turnout at 103,000.

Alick McWhirter, a senior bomb disposal officer, said the seizure of the explosives Friday was the largest of its kind in Hong Kong and called it troubling that such a dangerous substance was being made in a homemade laboratory in the middle of the city.

“It puts at risk everybody within the building. It puts at risk bystanders outside,” he told reporters.

Police spokesman Tse Chunchung said more arrests may follow.

Police have erected large barricades near government headquarte­rs in preparatio­n for the protest march through central Hong Kong on Sunday. Earlier marches have been largely peaceful, but in a recurring pattern, police have clashed with groups of mostly young protesters who try to take over streets or refuse to disperse after the main demonstrat­ion is over.

The extraditio­n bill, which would have allowed suspects to be sent to mainland China to face trial, fueled broader concerns that the freedoms and legal rights of Hong Kong residents are being eroded. The bill is seen as a threat to Hong Kong’s freedoms that were guaranteed for 50 years when China took back control of the former British colony in 1997.

Hong Kong’s leader, Carrie Lam, has declared the bill dead, but protesters are demanding her resignatio­n and an inquiry into the use of force by police to push back and disperse protesters.

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