HONG KONG – JULY 27 2019: Hong Kong reporters taking photos of a tear gas thrown to the protesters by the police (Photo by LO Kin-hei. Photos from Shutterstock).

by Yan ZHAO and Jerome TAYLOR
Hong Kong police on Monday (16 Sep) denied accusations their officers showed comparative lenience towards gangs of pro-Beijing men who attacked pro-democracy supporters during a weekend marked by multiple bloody street brawls.
The once stable international hub has been convulsed by weeks of huge, sometimes violent rallies calling for greater democratic freedoms and police accountability.
The movement is the biggest challenge to China’s rule since the city was handed back by Britain in 1997 and shows no sign of ending, with city leaders and Beijing taking a hard line.
On Sunday riot police fired tear gas and water cannon at hardcore pro-democracy protesters who were hurling rocks and petrol bombs, capping a 15th consecutive weekend of huge peaceful rallies followed by clashes.
But there was also an uptick in bloody street fights, with people on both sides of the political divide finding themselves beaten.
At a press conference on Monday, Hong Kong’s police displayed videos of multiple instances where individuals were attacked by pro-democracy supporters, including one where a man was kicked unconscious by a mob.
Pro-democracy activists were seen beating people in at least four separate locations throughout Sunday, with the unconscious man taken to hospital in a critical condition.
“The violence has again spiralled out of control and the situation is worrying,” police spokesman Superintendent John Tse told reporters.
“Many protesters took justice into their own hands and harshly assaulted people who were not on their side. We express the strongest condemnation against such reckless and ruthless violence,” he added.
Differential treatment?
But the police presentation spent little time documenting or condemning attacks by government supporters which occurred on both Saturday and Sunday in the districts of Fortress Hill and North Point, the latter a bastion of pro-Beijing sentiment where gangs have previously attacked their ideological opponents.
Social media lit up on Sunday evening as videos were posted of officers seemingly helping government supporters protect their identities or leave the scene.
One video showed two men being escorted by riot police repeatedly punch and kick reporters, with police seemingly not intervening, footage that sparked criticism from local press groups.
Many contrasted the footage with harsher treatment meted out to pro-democracy protesters when arrested.
But the force denied it had exhibited any double standards.
“In terms of differential treatment, I must refute (that),” Tse told reporters, adding police had arrested 29 people in North Point on Sunday night from both political camps.
He added the men who attacked journalists were later arrested.
Throughout the last three months the police force has found itself become increasingly reviled among pro-democracy protesters, accused of deploying disproportionate force and failing to protect people from pro-government assailants.
Viral videos of hard arrests, reports of injuries in custody and an attack by suspected triad gangsters on July 21 have only hardened sentiment, with officers routinely finding themselves harangued when they enter many neighbourhoods.
Police have refuted allegations of bias and say they have used proportionate force against weeks of violent protests in which a minority of hardcore activists are escalating their tactics as each week passes.
At his briefing, Tse said protesters threw as many as 80 Molotov cocktails.
On Monday the Junior Police Officers Association, which represents frontline officers, issued a statement saying police should use live rounds against petrol bomb throwers if they feel their life is in danger.
Supporters of the local police and government, many waving Chinese flags, have organised rallies although they have been smaller than the huge pro-democracy marches.
The protests were sparked by opposition to a now scrapped plan that would have allowed extraditions to the Chinese mainland.
But after Beijing and local leaders doubled down the movement snowballed and made further demands, including an inquiry into the police, an amnesty for the more than 1,400 arrested and universal suffrage.
– AFP

Subscribe
Notify of
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
You May Also Like

China mission members urge ‘routine’ virus origin probes

Experts who travelled to China to probe the COVID-19 pandemic’s origins called…

Workers’ Party Youth Wing to give live virtual tour of LO Pritam Singh’s office in Parliament

The Workers’ Party Youth Wing (WPYW) will be taking a personal tour…

民主党获准对更正指示提出上诉 日期待定

去年12月,人力部援引防止网络假信息和网络操纵法令,要求新加坡民主党在其脸书帖文与网络文章中作出更正。 民主党则申请撤销更正指示,却被驳回。高庭法官昨日(26日)批准民主党,就上述裁决向最高法院上诉庭提出上诉。 去年12月14日,人力部指民主党的三则包括脸书贴文图表与网络文章,均称本地受雇的专业人士、经理、执行员与技师(PMET)人数减少,而外国PMET的受雇则激增,同时民主党也在网络文章中指出本地PMET的被裁率愈来愈高,这些均与事实不符。 对此,民主党亦在今年1月2日作出回应,表示所采用的内容均出自于人力部的数据,因此内容均属实,并要求人力部长杨莉明撤销更正指示,并要求公开道歉。 随后,民主党也入禀高庭,申请撤销人力部的更正指示,而高庭在1月16日与17日进行审理,并于本月初发表书面裁决,驳回民主党的申请。 双方也在聆讯时提出证据,总检察署以代表政府的立场出席,并出示相关数据,表示2015年至2018年间,每1千名本地PMET中的被裁人数有所减少。 而民主党也出示图表显示,2010年至2018年间,每1千名本地PMET中的被裁人数呈上升趋势,以此辩驳。 对此,法官认为,民主党的数据追溯至2010年的论点存在问题,根据人力部的数据,民主党关于本地PMET人数骤减的言论是虚假的。 昨午,民主党向高庭申请,要求针对上述裁决提出上诉。经半小时的内堂审理后,法官予以批准。民主党秘书长徐顺全在庭外告诉媒体,上诉日期待定。 是否会聘请律师参与上诉,徐顺全则表示,“看起来我们似乎必须这样做”,但他也补充,目前仍未与党员达成共识。

【冠状病毒19】7月18日新增202确诊 七社区病例

截至本月18日中午12时,本地新增202例冠状病毒19确诊,其中七例是社区病例。 新增确诊大多为住宿舍客工,本地累计确诊已增至4万7655例。 卫生部文告称,新增社区感染病例,有五例是本地公民或永久居民,其余二人是工作证件持有人。 另有八例入境病例,一入境已遵循居家通知。