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			 Angry taxi drivers opposed to the protests, which have seriously 
			affected their business, also rallied at one barricaded road with a 
			row of 12 taxis, demanding an end to the protest. 
 "Open the roads," chanted a crowd, which included taxi and truck 
			drivers. Taxi drivers have given protesters a deadline of Wednesday 
			evening for all barricades to be lifted.
 
 A truck with a crane on top attempted to remove barricades from one 
			area until police eventually stopped it, but protesters complained 
			that police did not act quickly enough.
 
 Hundreds of police had earlier dismantled some barricades to relieve 
			traffic congestion in the Asian financial hub, but said protesters 
			could remain.
 
 But within hours, anti-Occupy Central groups descended on the 
			protest sites to try and disperse demonstrators, taking advantage of 
			the earlier police action to remove barricades.
 
 Scuffles quickly broke out, the first between demonstrators and 
			anti-protest groups, with protesters believing the attacks were 
			co-ordinated and may have involved triad Asian crime gangs.
 
			
			 
 "People from New Territories, blue ribbon (Beijing) supporters, 
			triads and taxi drivers must be coordinated by some sort of 
			people...the work is so well distributed. They went to different 
			places in order to keep protesters busy," said 49-year-old Mr Chan, 
			who declined to give his full name.
 
 Some of the anti-protest groups spoke Mandarin and could not speak 
			Cantonese, suggesting they were not from Hong Kong.
 
 "The group of people who look like gangsters, they start running 
			toward them (protesters), and then one of them hit an old man with 
			something hard, hit his head, so he's injured over there right now," 
			said 20-year-old student protester and witness Winnie Locke.
 
 Eventually police separated the two groups, forming a human 
			barricade between the two, and an uneasy calm returned to the 
			streets, but Hong Kong residents expect more flare-ups.
 
 "We will stay and defend. We will stay here until the end," said 
			25-year-old pro-democracy protester John, as he repaired damaged 
			barriers.
 
 The protesters, mostly students, are demanding full democracy and 
			have called on the city's embattled leader, Leung Chun-ying, to step 
			down after Beijing in August ruled out free elections for Hong 
			Kong's next leader in 2017.
 
 China rules Hong Kong under a "one country, two systems" formula 
			that accords the former British colony a degree of autonomy and 
			freedoms not enjoyed in mainland China, with universal suffrage set 
			as an eventual goal.
 
 The demonstrations escalated late last month after police used tear 
			gas and batons on demonstrators. Since then, police have been 
			largely hands-off and their presence minimal.
 
			
			 
			
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			MORE FLARE-UPS EXPECTED
 On Monday, police began removing some barricades in the areas of 
			Central and Admiralty, home to global financial institutions and 
			government buildings, as well as the bustling district of Mong Kok, 
			across the harbor from the glittering towers of Hong Kong Island.
 
 Many protesters donned face masks and goggles to protect themselves 
			against possible use of tear gas or pepper spray as police, some 
			carrying small riot shields, moved in.
 
 Tensions escalated near the main protest site after noon as nearly 
			200 mostly elderly, pro-Beijing supporters - wearing blue shirt and 
			ribbons - staged a rally as police stood guard.
 
 Many Hong Kong residents and businesses have become frustrated with 
			the inconvenience the protests are causing.
 
 "I used to support the movement, but then my business was 
			affected...what they did is useless anyway," said taxi driver Lee, 
			25, who estimates he has lost 60 percent of his business.
 
 Lee was part of a crowd of some 15 people with signs saying: "Taxi 
			Drivers & Operators Association: Save livelihood. Can't tolerate 
			anymore". Lee said taxi drivers will return if the protesters do not 
			quit by Wednesday.
 
 The Hong Kong and Beijing governments have called the protests 
			illegal. The Hong Kong government last week called off talks with 
			student leaders.
 
 On Sunday, Leung vowed to remain in office and warned students 
			demanding his resignation that their pro-democracy movement was out 
			of control.
 
 Leung has warned that there was "zero chance" that China's leaders 
			in Beijing would change an August decision limiting democracy in 
			Hong Kong.
 
 
			
			 
			The former British colony was promised that its freedoms would be 
			protected under a "one country/two systems" formula, when Britain 
			handed its old colony back to China 17 years ago.
 
 Beijing has said that only candidates screened by a nomination 
			committee will be able to contest a full city-wide vote to choose 
			the next chief executive in 2017.
 
 (Additional reporting by Diana Chan, Kinling Lo, Bobby Yip, Yimou 
			Lee, Joseph Campbell and Venus Wu; Writing by John Ruwitch; Editing 
			by Anne Marie Roantree and Michael Perry)
 
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