Chinese official urged Hong Kong villagers to drive off protesters
before violence at train station
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[July 26, 2019]
By James Pomfret, Greg Torode and David Lague
HONG KONG (Reuters) - A week before
suspected triad gang members attacked protesters and commuters at a
rural Hong Kong train station last Sunday, an official from China's
representative office urged local residents to drive away any activists.
Li Jiyi, the director of the Central Government Liaison's local district
office made the appeal at a community banquet for hundreds of villagers
in Hong Kong's rural New Territories.
In a previously unreported recording from the July 11 event obtained by
Reuters, Li addresses the large crowd about the escalating protests that
have plunged Hong Kong into its worst political crisis since it returned
to Chinese from British rule in 1997.
Li chastises the protesters, appealing to the assembled residents to
protect their towns in Yuen Long district and to chase anti-government
activists away.
"We won't allow them to come to Yuen Long to cause trouble," he said, to
a burst of applause.
"Even though there are a group of protesters trained to throw bricks and
iron bars, we still have a group of Yuen Long residents with the
persistence and courage to maintain social peace and protect our home."
Repeatedly, Li spoke of the need for harmony and unity between the
traditional villages and the government, "especially when there is wind
and rain in Hong Kong".
The banquet was attended by a Hong Kong government district officer,
Enoch Yuen, and many of the city's rural leaders.
Responding to Reuters' questions to Yuen, a spokesman for the Yuen Long
district office said it had no comment on the remarks of other speakers.
"District offices would relay local information and concerns gathered to
other departments, as appropriate," he added.
Last Sunday, after anti-government protesters marched in central Hong
Kong and defaced China's Liaison Office, over 100 men swarmed through
Yuen Long train station, attacking black-clad protesters, passers-by,
journalists and a lawmaker with pipes, clubs and lampstands.
When some protesters retaliated, the beatings escalated as men and women
were hit repeatedly on their heads and bodies by the masked men, who
wore white shirts.
Video footage showed victims fleeing the mayhem amid screams, and floors
of the train station streaked with blood. Forty-five people were
injured, one critically.
China's Liaison Office did not immediately respond to Reuters questions
about Li's speech, and Li could not be reached for comment.
Johnny Mak, a veteran Democratic Alliance district councilor in Yuen
Long who witnessed the train station bloodshed, said he believed Li's
remarks had been an explicit call to arms against protesters.
"If he didn't say this, the violence wouldn't have happened, and the
triads wouldn't have beaten people," he told Reuters in his office close
to the station.
Ching Chan-ming, the head of the Shap Pat Heung rural committee which
hosted the banquet that night, said he thought Li's speech was positive
and held no malicious intent.
"How could he (Li) make such an appeal like that?," Ching told Reuters.
"I don't think it was a mobilization call. His main message is that he
hopes Hong Kong can remain stable and prosperous."
TRIADS
The protesters are demanding Hong Kong's leader scrap a controversial
extradition law that many fear will extend China's reach into the city.
The government's refusal to do so - it has agreed only to suspend the
bill so far - have led to two months of sometimes violent demonstrations
across the city.
Beyond the extradition bill, many activists are demanding independent
inquiries into the use of police force against them, and far-reaching
democratic reforms - anathema to Beijing's leaders.
China's Foreign Ministry Office in Hong Kong said earlier this week that
"the recent extreme and violent acts in Hong Kong have seriously
undermined the foundation of the rule of law ... and trampled on the red
line of "One Country, Two Systems" which underpins Beijing's control of
Hong Kong.
Two senior police sources told Reuters some of the men who attacked the
protesters had triad backgrounds including from the powerful Wo Shing Wo,
Hong Kong's oldest triad society, and the 14K, another large, well-known
triad.
Police spokespeople didn't respond to Reuters questions about triad
involvement or any aspect of their operation that night.
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District councillor Johnny Mak Ip-sing, is pictured at his office in
Yuen Long, Hong Kong, China July 23, 2019. REUTERS/James Pomfret
While Hong Kong's triads - ancient secret societies that morphed
into mafia-style underworld operations - no longer hold the high
profile of previous decades they remain entrenched in some grittier
districts and in rural areas, according to police.
Police told reporters in 2014 during the so-called "Occupy"
democracy protests, that hundreds of triad members were suspected of
mounting operations to infiltrate, beat and harass those in the
movement. Several dozen people were arrested at the time.
NO POLICE IN SIGHT
Within hours of Sunday's violence, police bosses battled criticism
they had failed to protect the public given delays getting to the
scene.
Police commissioner Stephen Lo said there had been a need to
"redeploy manpower from other districts".
Democratic Party district councilor Zachary Wong said Li's message
was having an impact in the days leading up to Sunday's violence and
he had received repeated calls from associates a day earlier saying
something was brewing.
Wong said he called local police on Saturday, and then again on
Sunday at 7pm when he heard of men gathering in a Yuen Long park.
"Some people called me and said, 'We're really scared, please do
something," Wong told Reuters.
Both Mak and Wong said they were told by police they were aware of
the situation and were handling it.
During this time, pro-Beijing lawmaker Junius Ho was filmed laughing
and shaking hands with some of the men in white shirts near the
park. Giving them the 'thumbs up' sign, he said: "You are my
heroes". The men laughed and cheered in response.
Ho later told reporters he had no knowledge of or involvement in the
violence, but was merely reaching out to his constituents.
Ho was not immediately available at his office and could not be
reached on his mobile telephone.
Several hours later, when the most violent assaults took place at
the train station, there were still no police present to prevent the
bloodshed.
"It doesn't make sense that for many hours, there wasn't a single
police car in sight," said Mak.
Two senior police officers involved in controlling demonstrations
and a senior government security official told Reuters privately
they were incensed at public perceptions the police somehow acted in
concert with triads at Yuen Long.
After the attacks in Yuen Long train station, some of the assailants
fled to the traditional walled village of Nam Pin Wai nearby.
There, riot police and other officers surrounded and questioned
scores of men in white shirts for several hours, live media coverage
showed.
Sometime after 4 a.m., the men in white began to leave. No arrests
were made at the time, although a dozen men have since been
arrested, police said in a statement.
A police commander told reporters at the scene that no arrests were
made as the police could not prove the men were the assailants, and
no weapons were found.
Public anger over the incident has built in the days since, and tens
of thousands of people are expected to march through Yuen Long on
Saturday.
A rare open letter signed by a group of civil servants criticized
authorities' handling of the violence.
"The police's lack of response on July 21 had made people suspect
the government colluded with triads," wrote a group of 235 civil
servants from 44 government departments, including the police force.
"This had not only caused citizens to lose confidence in the police,
but also made civil servants suspect that the government departments
are not aimed to serve citizens faithfully."
At a news conference, Police Commissioner Lo denied any collusion
between his force and triads but acknowledged the need to restore
public confidence.
(Additional reporting by Jessie Pang, Felix Tam and Vimvam Tong;
Editing by Lincoln Feast)
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