Guernsey Press

Strike disrupts Hong Kong as leader vows to remain

Police deployed tear gas in the Wong Tai Sin district, the scene of clashes with protesters over the weekend.

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A general strike in Hong Kong has descended into citywide mayhem as defiant protesters started fires outside police stations and threw bricks and eggs at officers.

After disrupting traffic early in the day, they filled public parks and squares in several districts, refusing to disperse even as police repeatedly fired tear gas and rubber bullets from above.

While previous large rallies over the past two months of anti-government protests have generally been held over the weekends, Monday’s strike paralysed regular city operations in an effort to draw more attention to the movement’s demands.

Hong Kong is on “the verge of a very dangerous situation”, said Chief Executive Carrie Lam, who insisted that she has no plans to resign despite the ongoing tumult.

Hong Kong’s Chief Executive Carrie Lam
Carrie Lam (Kin Cheung/AP)

“I don’t think at this point in time, resignation of myself or some of my colleagues would provide a better solution,” she said.

Protesters challenged law enforcement in at least eight districts, responding to repeated rounds of tear gas with practised swiftness.

They lobbed the canisters back at police and shouted insults.

When police arrived on the scene, the protesters clacked their umbrellas together and pounded on metal street signs, daring the officers to move closer.

“Gangsters!” they jeered at the riot police. “Reclaim Hong Kong, revolution of our time,” they chanted.

In one neighbourhood after nightfall, a band of men wielding wooden poles charged at protesters from behind a thin road lane divider.

The demonstrators fought back by throwing traffic cones, metal barricades and rods of their own.

An umbrella is abandoned as protesters pull back from tear gas in Hong Kong
An umbrella is abandoned as protesters pull back from tear gas in Hong Kong (Kin Cheung/AP)

“Too much. Why do they have to create trouble for people not involved in their cause?” said John Chan, whose flight to Singapore was cancelled.

“Hong Kong is sinking. The government, police and protest people have to stop fighting and give us a break.”

Protesters also snarled the Monday morning rush hour by blocking train and platform doors, preventing subway and commuter rail trains from leaving their stations.

Mass transit authorities said a large number of people activated train and platform alarms and threw objects on to train tracks.

The strikes are the latest development in a summer of fiery demonstrations against proposed extradition legislation that would have allowed some suspects to be sent to mainland China for trials.

Protesters sit on a platform at Fortress Hill MTR station in Hong Kong
Protesters sit on a platform at Fortress Hill MTR station in Hong Kong (Vincent Thian/AP)

Hong Kong, a former British colony, was returned to China in 1997 under a framework of “one country, two systems”, which promised the city certain democratic freedoms not afforded to the mainland.

But some Hong Kong residents feel that Beijing has been increasingly encroaching on those rights.

The weekend was marked by now-routine clashes between protesters and police.

At a daily briefing, a police spokeswoman said 420 protesters have been arrested since June 9, the date of a massive march that drew more than one million people and ushered in the protest movement.

Those being held, who range in age from 14 to 76, face charges including rioting, unlawful assembly, possessing offensive weapons and assaulting officers and obstructing police operations, spokeswoman Yolanda Yu Hoi-kwan told reporters.

Ms Yu said police have used 1,000 tear gas grenades and fired more than 300 non-lethal bullets.

She said 139 officers had been injured in clashes, with two still in hospital with fractures.

Ms Yu said violence has been escalating, with protesters using petrol bombs and fire, including sending a trolley full of burning rubbish hurtling towards officers.

A couple hold hands as they join a protest in Hong Kong
A couple hold hands as they join a protest in Hong Kong (Kin Cheung/AP)

Senior superintendent Kong Wing-cheung, of the Police Public Relations Branch, said the police are fully supported by the government and there will be no need to deploy China’s military to help maintain order.

He said Ms Lam and other officials from her administration have stated the same on multiple occasions.

Speculation of intervention by the People’s Liberation Army was fuelled in part by a slick publicity video it released last week showing troops firing tear gas and dealing with a mock street demonstration.

The Communist Party-led central government in Beijing has condemned what it calls violent and radical protesters who have vandalised the Chinese national flag on the sidelines of major rallies.

China has accused unnamed “foreign forces” of inflaming the demonstrations out of a desire to contain the country’s development.

Protesters hold umbrellas and placards that read: “Anti-extradition bill” and “Go on strike” at Tamar Park, near the Central Government buildings in Hong Kong
Protesters hold umbrellas and placards at Tamar Park, near the Central Government buildings in Hong Kong (Vincent Thian/AP)

“We warn those maniacs and thugs who intend to continue to mess up Hong Kong by holding to a fantasy, that you must pay a price for your savage revenge,” the editorial said.

“So please become aware of your errors, turn back from your incorrect path and set down the butcher’s knives.”

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