The Day

Protesters shut down Hong Kong airport

- By TIMOTHY MCLAUGHLIN and ANNA KAM

Hong Kong — Thousands of protesters shut down Hong Kong’s internatio­nal airport Monday, defying an intensifyi­ng police crackdown, as China issued ominous warnings that described the protests as “terrorism” and began massing a paramilita­ry force in a southern border city.

Some of the protesters who had been occupying the airport’s arrivals hall swarmed into the departures area Monday, prompting authoritie­s to cancel all flights and advise travelers to leave one of the world’s busiest hubs.

The action came in response to a sharp increase in the level of force employed by Hong Kong’s embattled police. Hours before the airport shutdown, two police officers elsewhere in the city had pinned a black-clad demonstrat­or to the concrete, one officer’s knee pressing the young man’s face into a pool of his own blood.

“I’ve already been arrested,” the man yelled as he cried for help. “Don’t do this, I’m begging you.”

The scene, captured Sunday night by a cameraman from the Hong Kong Free Press, was jarring even in a city now accustomed to weekends awash with tear gas. It unleashed a fresh wave of anger toward Hong Kong’s police force, and the government, spurring thousands of demonstrat­ors to respond by occupying the airport.

Meanwhile, fears mounted that Beijing would soon resort to military action to quell the protests in the semiautono­mous territory. The nationalis­t Global Times tabloid tweeted a video showing Chinese armored personnel carriers heading toward the southern city of Shenzhen, which borders Hong Kong, ahead of what the paper called “large-scale exercises” by the People’s Armed Police, a paramilita­ry unit.

In the accompanyi­ng story, the newspaper elaborated: “The tasks and missions of the Armed Police include participat­ing in dealing with rebellions, riots, serious violent and illegal incidents, terrorist attacks and other social security incidents.”

China’s state broadcaste­r, CCTV, issued this report: “Alert! There are signs of terrorism on the streets of Hong Kong.” It warned, “No country can accept terrorist acts in its own country. ... End violence and restore order is the most important, urgent and overriding task of Hong Kong at present!”

 ?? VINCENT THIAN/AP PHOTO ?? A woman holds a placard during Monday’s sit-in protest at the arrival hall of the Hong Kong Internatio­nal Airport. It is reported that police shot a woman in the eye with a projectile Sunday night during confrontat­ions between protesters and police.
VINCENT THIAN/AP PHOTO A woman holds a placard during Monday’s sit-in protest at the arrival hall of the Hong Kong Internatio­nal Airport. It is reported that police shot a woman in the eye with a projectile Sunday night during confrontat­ions between protesters and police.

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