Hong Kong protesters, police clash as demonstrations target Chinese traders
Hong Kong protesters clashed with police on Saturday in a
town near the boundary with mainland China where thousands rallied against the
presence of Chinese traders, seizing on another grievance following major
unrest over an extradition bill.
The demonstration in the Hong Kong territorial town of
Sheung Shui, not far from the Chinese city of Shenzhen, began peacefully but
devolved into skirmishes and shouting. Protesters threw umbrellas and hardhats
at police, who retaliated by swinging batons and firing pepper spray.
Later, Hong Kong police urged protesters to refrain from
violence and leave the area. By around 8:30 p.m. (1230 GMT), most had retreated
as police in riot helmets and wielding large shields swept through the town to
reclaim the streets.
The protest was the latest in a series that have roiled the
former British colony for more than a month, giving rise to its worst political
crisis since its 1997 handover to China.
Sometimes violent street protests have drawn in millions of
people, with hundreds even storming the legislature on July 1 to oppose a
now-suspended extradition bill that would have allowed criminal suspects in
Hong Kong to be sent to China to face trial in courts under ruling Communist
Party control.
Critics see the bill as a threat to Hong Kong’s rule of law.
Chief Executive Carrie Lam this week said the bill was “dead” after having
suspended it last month, but opponents vow to settle for nothing short of its
formal withdrawal.
Protests against the bill had largely taken place in Hong
Kong’s main business district, but demonstrators have recently begun to look
elsewhere to widen support by taking up narrower, more domestic issues.
In Sheung Shui, protesters rallied to oppose small-time
Chinese traders who make short trips into the territory to buy goods that they
then haul back to China to sell.
The demonstrators chanted demands in Mandarin, China’s
official language, for the Chinese traders to go home. Many street-level shops
were shuttered during the march.
The traders have long been a source of anger among those in
Hong Kong who say they have fueled inflation, driven up property prices, dodged
taxes and diluted Sheung Shui’s identity.
“Our lovely town has become chaos,” said Ryan Lai, 50, a
resident of Sheung Shui, where so-called “parallel traders” buy bulk quantities
of duty-free goods to be carried into mainland China and sold.
“We don’t want to stop travel and buying, but please, just
make it orderly and legal. The extradition bill was the tipping point for us to
come out. We want Sheung Shui back.”
When Britain returned Hong Kong to China 22 years ago,
Chinese Communist leaders promised the city a high degree of autonomy for 50
years. But many say China has progressively tightened its grip, putting Hong
Kong’s freedoms under threat through a range of measures such as the
extradition bill.
DEMOCRACY DEFICIT
Hong Kong’s lack of full democracy was behind the recent
unrest, said Jimmy Sham of the Civil Human Rights Front, which organized
protests against the extradition bill.
“The government, Carrie Lam, some legislators in functional
constituencies are not elected by the people, so there are many escalating
actions in different districts to reflect different social issues,” he said.
“If political problems are not solved, social well-being issues will continue
to emerge endlessly.”
One protester said Saturday’s scuffles started when
demonstrators charged the police after the latter came to the assistance of
mainland traders who had assaulted demonstrators.
“Some people were attacked and got injured in a stampede. I
tried to save some girls so I was also attacked by pepper spray by police. Now
I feel so bad. The cops are dogs,” said the man, who would only give the name
Ragnar.
Protesters ripped up median barriers and fences to set up
roadblocks and defenses.
A young man was treated for a bloody head wound meters from
where surrounded police were hitting activists armed with umbrellas. A baton
charge by police in riot gear cleared the street minutes later to free trapped
officers.
“We have no weapons and we were peaceful. When we saw them
taking photos of us in the crowd we had to react,” said another protester,
surnamed Chan, who declined to give his full name.
“We are all scared now. How can they hit us with batons?” he
said, staring at a pool of blood where one of his peers was treated.
Last week nearly 2,000 people marched in the Tuen Mun
residential district to protest against what they saw as the nuisance of brash
singing and dancing to Mandarin pop songs by middle-aged mainland women.
On Sunday, tens of thousands marched in one of Kowloon’s
most popular tourist shopping areas, trying to persuade mainland Chinese
tourists to back opposition to the extradition bill.
“We want to raise awareness in Washington that the United
States has to do more now to help Hong Kong become fully democratic,” said a
resident of the nearby town of Fanling, who was one of five people in
Saturday’s crowd carrying U.S. flags.
“They are the most important power left that can stand up to
China,” added the 30-year-old man, who gave his name only as David.
Anti-extradition protesters plan another demonstration on
Sunday in the town of Sha Tin, in the so-called New Territories between Hong
Kong island and the border with China.