Protesters march in Hong Kong as rival rally supports police
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[August 03, 2019]
By Anne Marie Roantree and Vimvam Tong
HONG KONG (Reuters) - Thousands of mostly
black-clad activists set off on a protest march in Hong Kong's Mong Kok
district on Saturday, as the Chinese-controlled city braced for another
weekend of anti-government demonstrations.
Protests against a proposed bill allowing people to be extradited to
stand trial in mainland China have escalated since June, growing
increasingly violent, with police accused of excessive force and failing
to protect protesters from suspected gang attacks.
Mong Kok, which includes gritty working class sections and is also a
popular shopping destination, was the scene of some of the most violent
clashes during pro-democracy protests in 2014.
Many of Saturday's demonstrators wore yellow or white hard hats, and the
crowds chanted "age of revolution!" and "Hongkongers, add oil!" - a
popular exhortation in Cantonese.
"I'm a little worried about whether the police force might use violent
ways on the demonstrators because the route of the demonstration is a
little bit narrow, and if we want to leave it might be difficult to get
away from the police," said a 20-year-old university student named Ivan.
"I think this entire movement will continue until at least the end of
2019," he said.
Hundreds of marchers held posters with an illustration of protesters in
hard hats tending to a young child, with the words "protect the future".
The crowd was mostly young, but also included families and many older
people. Some young couples held hands.
"We are here because we want to stick up for Hong Kong. We don't need an
evil law to take over Hong Kong," said a woman surnamed Yau who was
joined by family members including her 11-year-old daughter.
As the marchers gathered at the starting point, one passed around
pre-paid subway cards to young groups, while others gave out chicken
wings and McDonalds food. When the march started, volunteers handed out
hard hats, face masks and water bottles.
Most of the shops in the upscale Langham Place shopping mall had pulled
down their shutters by late afternoon, and many street-facing businesses
along the march route had closed.
POLICE SUPPORTERS
Across the harbor, on Hong Kong island, thousands of police supporters,
mostly wearing white, gathered for a separate rally amid a carnival-like
atmosphere in Victoria Park.
Many waved Hong Kong and Chinese flags and the crowd shouted slogans in
support of the police. Pro-Beijing lawmaker Junius Ho was greeted with
strong applause.
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Anti-extradition bill
protesters march at Mongkok, in Hong Kong, China, August 3, 2019.
REUTERS/Eloisa Lopez
"We are the real Hong Kong people who are not the same as those
black-shirted thugs. We don't need a so-called 'HK revolution', we
only need to do our best, which is enough," he told the crowd.
Sylvia Lam, 61, who described herself as a housewife, said she had
turned up at the pro-police rally to oppose violence.
"I feel extremely uncomfortable when every time I watch TV, the
scenes are so radical," she said.
"Young people should stop and think, don't become someone's
political tools, be rational please," she said.
MORE PROTESTS PLANNED
Further anti-government protests were scheduled for Sunday, with
activists calling for a mass strike on Monday.
On Friday evening in central Hong Kong, thousands of civil servants
defied a warning from authorities to remain politically neutral and
joined anti-government protests for the first time since they
started two months ago.
In Washington on Friday, a bipartisan group of U.S. lawmakers called
on the Trump administration to halt future sales of munitions and
crowd-control equipment to Hong Kong's police force, which has been
accused of using excessive force against protesters.
Under Chinese rule, Hong Kong has been allowed to retain extensive
freedoms, such as an independent judiciary, but many residents see
the extradition bill as the latest step in a relentless march toward
mainland control.
The protests are the most serious political crisis in Hong Kong
since it returned to China 22 years ago.
They also pose the greatest popular challenge to Chinese leader Xi
Jinping since he took office in 2012 and come as Xi grapples with an
escalating trade war with the United States and a slowing economy in
a politically sensitive year. On Oct. 1, China will mark the 70th
anniversary of the founding of the People's Republic.
(Reporting by Anne Marie Roantree, Sumeet Chatterjee, Vimvam Tong,
Donny Kwok, Twinnie Siu and Marius Zaharia; Writing by Tony Munroe;
Editing by Michael Perry)
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