The Columbus Dispatch

Hong Kong crisis intensifie­s after attack on protesters

- By Nadia Lam

HONG KONG — An overnight attack by white-clad assailants apparently targeting pro-democracy protesters raised tensions to new levels in Hong Kong on Monday as China harshly criticized the weekend demonstrat­ion, saying “central authority cannot be challenged.”

The Chinese rebuke came after its Hong Kong office was targeted Sunday night by protesters who pelted it with eggs and spray-painted its walls. It made no mention of the violent attack hours later at a subway station by men wielding iron pipes and wooden poles as they beat up people clad in the prodemocra­cy movement’s black shirts. Dozens were injured.

The attack on China’s Liaison Office was an escalation of the weekslong protest during which demonstrat­ors besieged Hong Kong’s legislatur­e and police headquarte­rs but did not direct their ire at China itself. It came after more than 100,000 people marched through the city to demand democracy and an investigat­ion into the use of force by police to disperse crowds at protests.

As demonstrat­ors made their way home, a gang of men descended on a group of them at a subway station. Video of the attack in Hong Kong’s Yuen Long neighborho­od showed the protesters being beaten by the assailants as they retreated into the trains, intimidate­d by the gangs of men waiting for them outside the turnstiles. The attackers then entered the trains and beat the people inside as they tried to defend themselves with umbrellas.

At least 45 people were injured, and 15 remained hospitaliz­ed Monday afternoon, including one man in critical condition, the Hospital Authority said.

The Sunday night assault on Beijing’s Hong Kong Liaison Office touched a raw nerve in China. China’s national emblem, which hangs on the front of the building, was splattered with black ink. It was replaced by a new one within hours.

The official People’s Daily newspaper, in a front-page commentary on Monday headlined “Central Authority Cannot Be Challenged,” called the protesters’ actions “intolerabl­e.”

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