Hong Kong police arrest protesters in shopping mall
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[December 28, 2019]
By Joyce Zhou and Xihao Jiang
HONG KONG (Reuters) - Hong Kong police
arrested about a dozen protesters and used pepper spray on Saturday to
break up a protest in a shopping mall aimed at disrupting retail
businesses near the border with mainland China.
Demonstrators have been targeting malls across Hong Kong since earlier
this week and more than a hundred protesters, many dressed in black with
face masks, marched through a mall in Sheung Shui on Saturday, chanting
"Go back to China".
Sheung Shui, which is just over the border from the Chinese city of
Shenzhen, is popular with so-called parallel traders who buy large
volumes of duty-free goods in Hong Kong and then sell them on the
mainland.
The Chinese traders have become a target for protesters in Hong Kong,
who are blame them for overcrowding and pushing up prices and rents.
"Our intention is to make shops close their gates. There are many
parallel traders, we want to cast them out," said Kelly, a 17-year-old
protester wearing mask.
Police wrestled one protester to the ground and pepper sprayed his face
before handcuffing him. Many shops closed early and shoppers hurried out
of the mall.
The protests in Hong Kong began more than six months ago in response to
a now-withdrawn bill that would have allowed extraditions to mainland
China, where courts are controlled by the Communist Party.
The demonstrations have since evolved into a broader pro-democracy
movement and became more confrontational over the festive season.
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Plain-cloth police officers detain anti-government protesters inside
the Sheung Shui shopping mall in Hong Kong, China December 28, 2019.
REUTERS/Navesh Chitrakar
More protests are planned in the next few days, including a
countdown to New Year's Day and a march on Jan. 1 organized by the
civil human rights front that could attract thousands.
Many protesters have been angered by what they see as the use of
unnecessary force by police and have demanded an independent inquiry
into the force's behavior.
Hong Kong police have earned a total of $17.3 million in meal and
work-related allowances during the past six months of
anti-government protests, government figures showed on Friday.
Demonstrators are also angry at what they perceive as increased
meddling by Beijing in freedoms promised to the former British
colony when it returned to Chinese rule in 1997.
China denies interfering, saying it is committed to the "one
country, two systems" formula put in place at that time, and blames
foreign forces for fomenting unrest.
(Writing by Clare Jim; Editing by David Clarke)
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