Hong Kong enters 15th week of mass protests as unrest continues
Rival groups of demonstrators clashed in Hong Kong
and police made arrests in another weekend of mass protests after months of
political unrest.
Dozens of pro-Beijing protesters waved Chinese flags
and chanted “support the police” at a mall in Kowloon Bay on Saturday, as
pro-democracy demonstrators gathered, clad in black and wearing masks. After a
standoff, members of the two sides began to fight, throwing punches and hitting
each other with umbrellas before police separated them. At least one man was seen
bleeding from the head.
Groups of anti-government and pro-government
protesters yelled at each other and scuffled by a nearby “Lennon wall” – murals
of protest art set up by demonstrators.
In one incident, protesters surrounded a woman they
accused of filming them and refused to let her leave. Police were seen tackling
and subduing several people, some of whom said they were local residents going
to the mall.
As Hong Kong enters its fourth month of mass
protests, tensions between supporters and critics of the pro-democracy movement
have escalated. Earlier on Saturday, fights broke out between a group of
pro-government demonstrators in blue T-shirts and residents in Fortress Hill
after a Lennon wall had been torn down.
Videos showed groups of men using Chinese flags to
beat mostly younger men. In one scene, a group chased and kicked a young man
until a passerby shielded him with his body.
Hundreds of anti-government protesters in masks and
all-black outfits were also marching in Tin Shui Wai, a neighbourhood in Hong
Kong’s New Territories, defying a police ban on the planned event. Bus lines to
the area were shut, as riot police faced off against protesters who were
building barricades on the streets.
Saturday marks the 15th consecutive weekend of mass
protests in Hong Kong, where demonstrations against the government have deeply
divided society. The protests, triggered by an extradition bill that would
allow suspects to be sent to mainland China, has turned into a broader
pro-democracy movement.
Hong Kong’s leader, Carrie Lam, has said that she
will permanently withdraw the bill, but protesters have vowed to continue until
all their demands are met. On Friday, thousands of protesters marked the
mid-autumn festival by forming human chains across the city. Hundreds hiked to
several peaks where they shined lanterns and torches.
More than 100 secondary school students gathered in
central Hong Kong, where they sang Glory to Hong Kong, a song that has become
the unofficial anthem of the protests, and stuck signs and posted messages
along a wall.
“I’m showing up to support the younger generation,”
said Cheng, 21, a university student attending the rally of secondary students.
“Just because one demand was fulfilled doesn’t mean we should back down. We
should keep fighting for all five of the demands.”
He said: “There are a lot less people showing up to
these kinds of protests and gathering, and I hope Hong Kong people will still
remember what happened within these three months.”
During the past week, demonstrators have gathered in
malls across the city to sing the anthem, in a departure from previous weeks of
violent street battles with police.
Observers believe authorities are eager to stop the
protests before 1 October, when China celebrates its national day, the 70th
anniversary of the founding of the People’s Republic of China.
Many protesters believe it is a key date to apply
more pressure on the government. One group has raised more than HK$8m
(£820,000) to place adverts in the main newspapers on that day.