Hong Kong police fired tear gas yesterday to disperse a rally called over concerns about police conduct in months-long pro-democracy demonstrations, with protesters cursing the officers and calling them “gangster cops.”
Organizers called for the demonstration at a waterfront park, but police said the rally was unauthorized and engaged in a standoff with the protesters after ordering them to leave.
The protesters taunted the officers, calling them names, and the situation appeared tense. Police fired rounds of tear gas and moved forward to chase away the crowds.
Police have faced criticism for heavy-headed tactics including tear gas, pepper spray, rubber bullets and a water cannon to subdue protesters who have hurled bricks and firebombs.
Protesters said they will also march in support of the former British colony’s ethnic and religious minorities, in a show of unity after police used a water cannon to spray a mosque and bystanders the previous weekend.
Protesters have taken to the streets since early June. The movement was initially sparked by an unpopular extradition bill that many residents worried would put them at risk of being sent into mainland China’s Communist Party-controlled judicial system.
The government formally withdrew the bill last week, but the movement has snowballed to include demands for political reform and police accountability.
Even though the Hong Kong government formally withdrew the extradition bill on Wednesday, it hasn’t had much effect on cooling the unrest, rally-goers said.
“Because the problem is much more than before,” said a protester who only gave his name as Nephets, citing heavy-handed police tactics. “We can see the future is controlled by China. We can see all the rules and even the law is starting to be controlled by the China government. For the Hong Kong people there’s no say over our land and that is the problem.”
Nephets, who said he was 40 and worked in media, said he attended protests in support of younger hardcore protesters who have led violent confrontations with police.
At a rally on Saturday night organized by medical workers to oppose what they called “violent repression” by police in response to protesters, some demonstrators jeered and cursed at several officers observing from a footbridge.
Also Saturday, Hong Kong’s government won a temporary court order banning anyone from posting personal details or photos of police officers online. The order prohibits unlawfully “publishing, communicating or disclosing” officers’ details including their Facebook and Instagram account IDs or photos of officers or their family members.
The government said Saturday that the High Court granted the Department of Justice’s request for the interim injunction to “restrain doxing and harassment of police officers and their families.”
The wide-ranging order prohibits unlawfully “publishing, communicating or disclosing” officers’ details including their Facebook and Instagram account IDs or photos of officers or their family members.
The order, in effect until Nov. 8, also prohibits “intimidating, molesting, harassing, threatening, pestering or interfering” with police officers or their relatives.
It’s unclear how authorities will be able to enforce the order and whether it applies to media photos of the protests.
Protesters ignored the order and continued to post photos and details of officers on an online forum. Supporters of the semi-autonomous Chinese territory’s protest movement have also had their details posted on a website.
This month, an 18-year-old was charged with intentional wounding for a slashing attack on a riot officer.
Despite repeated government appeals for people not to side with mobs involved in vandalism, throwing gasoline bombs and other violence, the protest movement is still rousing determined support from more moderate demonstrators. They’re broadly worried about the future and freedoms of the city that reverted to Chinese rule in 1997, with promises from Beijing that it would largely be its own boss, its way of life unchanged. KELVIN CHAN, AP
Shops fortify facades
As Hong Kong’s protest movement becomes increasingly violent, some shops are battening the hatches.
Banks, retailers, restaurants and travel agents with ties to mainland China or perceived pro-Beijing ownership have fortified their facades over apparent fear of further damage after protesters trashed businesses following a recent pro-democracy rally.
Branches of state-owned Chinese banks across the city reinforced their glass fronts with walls of steel on Friday.
A Japanese noodle chain, a sushi chain and Starbucks outlets that have been targeted by protesters also covered up their shopfronts with wooden panels. The three are reportedly operated by a restaurant company founded by a tycoon whose daughter has denounced the protesters.
A welder put the finishing touches on grey steel panels covering up an Industrial and Commercial Bank of China branch in the city’s Wan Chai district.
Across the street, a state-owned China Travel Service outlet was getting the same treatment.
Signs at a nearby China Construction Bank branch said “enhancement work was in progress” but it was business as usual and apologized for the inconvenience.
Staff at the businesses refused to comment.
A passing pro-democracy supporter, restaurant manager Tim Lo, said it wouldn’t solve the root cause of the conflict. “Barricading is useless,” he said. MDT/AP
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