Hong Kong police fire tear gas, water cannon in latest clashes
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[August 31, 2019]
By Joe Brock and Farah Master
HONG KONG (Reuters) - Hong Kong police
fired tear gas and water cannon on Saturday as pro-democracy protesters
threw petrol bombs in the latest in a series of clashes that have
plunged the Chinese-ruled city into its worst political crisis in
decades.
Police fired round after round of tear gas as protesters took cover
behind umbrellas between the local headquarters of China's People's
Liberation Army and government HQ. Protesters also threw bricks at
police.
The water cannon fired blue-dyed water, traditionally used elsewhere in
the world to make it easier for police to identify protesters later.
Riot police then marched on foot towards the neighboring Admiralty
district, followed by about 20 police cars, where some protesters had
thrown fire bombs. Others shone blue and green lasers at police lines.
The violence came on the fifth anniversary of a decision by China to
curtail democratic reforms in the former British colony, which returned
to China in 1997.
The PLA on Thursday rotated its troops in Hong Kong in what it said was
a routine operation. Their Hong Kong HQ was the former base of the
British military garrison.
Thousands took to the streets in the afternoon on a largely peaceful,
meandering rally in the rain, many joining a "Christian march" from the
Wanchai entertainment district and congregating next to the Legislative
Council, stormed by activists in an earlier protest.
Other demonstrators, many wearing black and face masks, marched in the
Causeway Bay shopping district.
It was the latest in a string of protests over three months, some of
which have turned violent, targeting the airport, the legislature and
the Liaison Office, the symbol of Chinese rule.
"Hong Kong has religious freedom," Sally Yeung, 27, a Christian, told
Reuters. "We are praying at different check points and praying for
justice to arrive in Hong Kong.
"If they prosecute us simply because we are praying, they infringe our
religious freedom."
Hovering under an umbrella outside the government offices, Eric, a
22-year-old student, said telling people not to protest was like telling
them not to breathe.
"I feel it's my duty to fight for democracy," he said. "Maybe we win,
maybe we lose. But we fight."
Police erected water-filled plastic barriers around key government
buildings and two water cannon, used briefly for the first time last
weekend, were at the ready near the Liaison Office, which was daubed
with graffiti in an earlier protest.
The MTR subway suspended some services and shut station exits because of
likely "public activities".
"BE LIKE WATER"
Police arrested a number of prominent pro-democracy activists and three
lawmakers on Friday, seeking to rein in a movement which started with
anger over planned legislation allowing extraditions to mainland China.
It soon broadened into calls for democracy amid fears China is squeezing
Hong Kong's freedoms.
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Police officers fire tear gas at demonstrators during a protest in
Hong Kong, China August 31, 2019. REUTERS/Kai Pfaffenbach
But the latest protests have no leaders. The slogan is "be like
water", meaning be flexible. Marchers on Saturday were marching here
and there, wherever streets took them, communicating with different
hand signals and chanting "stand with Hong Kong" and "fight for
freedom".
China denies the charge of meddling in Hong Kong, which it says is
an internal affair. It has denounced the protests and warned of the
damage to the economy.
China is eager to quell the unrest before the 70th anniversary of
the founding of the People's Republic of China on Oct. 1 but
protesters vandalized a long red banner celebrating the event to
cheers from the crowd.
Beijing has also accused foreign powers, particularly the United
States and Britain, of fomenting the demonstrations and warned
against foreign interference.
Hong Kong returned to China under a "one country, two systems"
formula that allows it to keep freedoms not enjoyed on the mainland,
like the freedom to protest and an independent legal system.
There have been frequent clashes between protesters and police, who
have often fired tear gas and rubber bullets to disperse crowds,
amid accusations of excessive force.
"A lot of people from the outside think it is the police who
escalate (the violence) first," a police officer told a media
briefing. "This is not true."
An off-duty policeman was attacked late on Friday night by three
unidentified men with a knife in the Kwai Chung container port area,
suffering wounds to his limbs and back, police said. The news was a
top-trending topic on China's Twitter-like Weibo.
With protesters and authorities locked in an impasse and Hong Kong
facing its first recession in a decade, speculation has grown that
the city government may impose emergency laws, giving it extra
powers over detentions, censorship and curfews.
Lawmaker Fernando Cheung said the arrests of the three legislators
were probably aimed at causing more anger and chaos to justify the
use of emergency laws.
"To incite more people to come out today is totally ridiculous," he
told Reuters.
(Additional reporting by Marius Zaharia, jesse Pang, Joe Brock,
Farah Master, Clare Jim and Twinnie Siu; Writing by Nick Macfie;
Editing by Clarence Fernandez and Jacqueline Wong)
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