Hong Kong police arrest at least 60 for protesting on China holiday
Crowds gathered on the streets of a popular shopping
district chanting pro-democracy slogans Hong Kong on Thursday resulting in
police arrested at least 60 people on suspicion of unauthorized assembly on
China's National Day.
Those arrested included two district councilors,
police said in a statement posted on Facebook. They said the people were
arrested after they ignored repeated warnings asking them to disperse.
Online calls urged people to join protests, and
crowds turned up at Hong Kong's Causeway Bay shopping district, some people
chanting "Disband the police" and "Liberate Hong Kong,
Revolution of our time," a popular pro-democracy slogan that has been
banned by the Hong Kong government for alleged secessionist sentiments.
A heavy police presence outnumbered the protesters
at the scene.
National Day, which celebrates the founding of the
People's Republic of China, has become a day of protest in Hong Kong by those
who oppose Beijing's increasing control over the semi-autonomous city.
Large-scale protests are forbidden because of social distancing restrictions
due to the coronavirus.
In the afternoon, police cordoned off some areas in
the district and searched people on the streets. On several occasions, they
unfurled warning banners that urged protesters to disperse, saying they were
participating in an illegal assembly.
Protests against the Hong Kong and mainland Chinese
governments swelled last year, and Beijing clamped down on expressions of
anti-government sentiment in the city with a new national security law that
took effect June 30.
The law outlaws subversive, secessionist, and
terrorist activity, as well as collusion with foreign powers to interfere in
the city's internal affairs. The US and Britain accuse China of infringing on
the city's freedoms, and the US has imposed sanctions on government officials
in Hong Kong and China over the law.
At a National Day reception, Hong Kong leader Carrie
Lam said "stability has been restored to society while national security
has been safeguarded" under the new law.
Lam also accused some foreign governments of holding
"double standards" and leveling unjustified accusations against the
authorities who implement the new law.



