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		Hong Kong office workers, schoolmates denounce police shooting of teen
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		 [October 02, 2019] 
		By Clare Jim and Yiming Woo 
 HONG KONG (Reuters) - Hong Kong office 
		workers and high-school students turned out in their hundreds under a 
		sweltering midday sun on Wednesday to denounce a policeman for shooting 
		and wounding a teenager during the most violent clashes in nearly four 
		months of unrest.
 
 The office workers marched to Chater Garden in the Central business 
		district as the students, some in the same class as the wounded 
		18-year-old, demonstrated outside his New Territories school.
 
 More than 100 people were wounded during Tuesday's turmoil, the Hospital 
		Authority said, as anti-China demonstrators took to the streets across 
		the Chinese-ruled territory, throwing petrol bombs and attacking police 
		who responded with tear gas and water cannon. Five remained in a serious 
		condition with 35 stable.
 
 Thirty police were injured, with five in hospital.
 
 During one clash, an officer shot an 18-year-old school student in the 
		chest with a live round after coming under attack with a metal bar, 
		video footage showed. The teen was in stable condition in hospital on 
		Wednesday.
 
		 
		
 Protesters outside the wounded student's school, the Tsuen Wan Public Ho 
		Chuen Yiu Memorial College, chanted "Free Hong Kong", condemned the 
		police and urged a thorough investigation.
 
 "(It's) ridiculous, it can't happen, and it should not be happening in 
		Hong Kong," said one 17-year-old who goes to the same school.
 
 "It really disappointed me and let me down about the policeman. I don't 
		know why they took this action to deal with a Form Five student. Why do 
		you need to shoot? It's a real gun."
 
 Protesters have previously been hit with anti-riot bean-bags rounds and 
		rubber bullets and officers have fired live rounds in the air, but this 
		was the first time a demonstrator had been shot with a live round.
 
 Police said the officer involved was under serious threat and acted in 
		self-defense in accordance with official guidelines.
 
 Police said they arrested 269 people - 178 males and 91 females - aged 
		12 to 71 during the Tuesday turmoil, while officers fired about 1,400 
		rounds of tear gas, 900 rubber bullets and six live rounds.
 
 The protests, on the 70th anniversary of the founding of the People's 
		Republic of China, were aimed at propelling the activists' fight for 
		greater democracy onto the international stage and embarrassing the 
		city's political leaders in Beijing.
 
 The former British colony has been rocked by months of protests over a 
		now-withdrawn extradition bill that would have allowed people to be sent 
		to mainland China for trial but have evolved into calls for democracy, 
		among other demands.
 
 The outpouring of opposition to the Beijing-backed government has 
		plunged the city into its biggest political crisis in decades and poses 
		the gravest popular challenge to President Xi Jinping since he came to 
		power.
 
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			Anti-government demonstrators attend a flash mob protest after 
			violent China's National Day protests, at Central, in Hong Kong, 
			China October 2, 2019 REUTERS/Tyrone Siu 
            
 
            The pro-establishment Democratic Alliance for the Betterment and 
			Progress of Hong Kong condemned Tuesday's violence and urged the 
			government to impose emergency laws to resolve the crisis.
 'CHILLING DISREGARD'
 
 Many shops and business closed on Tuesday in anticipation of the 
			violence, which is taking a growing toll on the city's economy as it 
			faces its first recession in a decade and the central government 
			grapples with a U.S.-China trade war and a global slowdown.
 
 Standard & Poor's cut its Hong Kong economic growth forecast on 
			Tuesday to 0.2 percent for this year, down from its forecast of 2.2 
			percent in July, blaming tension in the city for plunging retail 
			sales and a sharp dip in tourism.
 
 The Hong Kong General Chamber of Commerce condemned the violence.
 
 "Extremists’ chilling disregard for the rule of law is not only 
			affecting Hong Kong’s reputation as an international financial and 
			business center, but also crippling many small businesses and 
			threatening the livelihoods of hundreds of thousands of ordinary 
			citizens," it said in a statement.
 
 The protesters come from wide-ranging backgrounds. Of 96 charged 
			after violence on Sunday, eight were under 18, some were students, 
			others had jobs ranging from waiter, teacher and surveyor to sales 
			manager, construction worker and a hotel employee.
 
 Protesters are angry about what they see as creeping interference by 
			Beijing in their city's affairs despite a promise of autonomy in the 
			"one country, two systems" formula under which Hong Kong returned to 
			China in 1997.
 
 China dismisses accusations it is meddling and has accused foreign 
			governments, including the United States and Britain, of stirring up 
			anti-China sentiment.
 
 The protesters are increasingly focusing their anger on mainland 
			Chinese businesses and those with pro-Beijing links, daubing 
			graffiti on store fronts and vandalizing outlets in the heart of the 
			financial center.
 
            
			 
			The Bank of China (Hong Kong) said two of its branches came under 
			attack on Tuesday.
 
 "The bank expresses its deepest anger and strongly condemns this 
			illegal, violent behavior," it said in a statement.
 
 (Reporting by Clare Jim and Yimin Woo; Additional reporting by 
			Twinnie Siu, Jessie Pang, Bill Rigby, Donny Kwok, Sumeet Chatterjee; 
			Writing by Farah Master, Anne Marie Roantree and Nick Macfie; 
			Editing by Robert Birsel)
 
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