Hong Kong protests: flash-mob shopping tours, trashed train stations and shops, tear gas and water cannons a – Business Insider India

Posted: Published on November 11th, 2019

This post was added by Alex Diaz-Granados

Radical protesters played a cat-and-mouse game with police on Sunday as they staged flash-mob shopping tours, blocked roads and trashed train stations and mainland-linked shops amid festering anger over the mysterious death of a student.

As calls spread online for demonstrators to go on mall marches, scuffles broke out between protesters and police by mid-afternoon in at least seven districts. Large shopping centres in these neighbourhoods were soon swept up in a frenzy of confrontations and clashes as shoppers tried to dodge the chaos or, in some cases, joined in to hurl abuse at riot police.

While calm returned to most of the districts by early evening, groups of radicals in Mong Kok obstructed traffic with barricades and started throwing bricks and other projectiles at police, leaving the roads studded with concrete blocks. A water cannon was deployed to disperse the crowd there, and about 15 rounds of tear gas were fired in Tsuen Wan throughout the evening as tensions escalated.

At night, protesters gathered outside the car park in Tseung Kwan O where Chow fell and sustained a severe brain injury. They began a stand-off with police, pointing laser beams at the officers.

The violent core first began their antics at Sha Tin railway station in the early afternoon, vandalising turnstiles and smashing glass doors, before moving on to damage a Maxims cafe and Maxims Palace restaurant, overturning tables and chairs and breaking china.

A street in Mong Kok, blocked by protesters barricades. Photo: Edmond So

The 24th straight weekend of protests had noticeably smaller numbers of protesters, but bystanders in the malls often cheered them on. In the malls and on the streets, protesters and their supporters repeatedly chanted rapists at police, referencing an allegation made in a media report that stunned many over the weekend. A teenager had an abortion after she claimed she was gang-raped inside a police station in Tsuen Wan. Police said their investigations did not match her accusations but that they would continue their inquiries.

The circumstances of his fall remained unclear but many blamed the police. Some have accused officers of pushing him while others said they delayed an ambulance, both charges which the force has denied. Police also said CCTV footage showed he was walking alone around the car park not long before he fell.

A Tuen Mun resident who was out to lend support to the protesters, and gave her name only as Jessie, said the police force needed to be rebuilt at all ranks as she argued an independent probe to look into their actions one of the protesters five demands was no longer sufficient.

As they backed away, one was hit in his right eye. One by one, the four pulled retractable batons from their bags, further fuelling the suspicion that they were deploying force-issued weapons. Two months ago, the force gave all off-duty officers the right to carry such batons.

Even though the black-clad protesters were in smaller groups, spread thinly over the districts, the mayhem they caused forced buses to be diverted and traffic to seize up on multiple roads.

In Tsuen Wan, fewer than 40 of them went into Citywalk shopping centre and began trashing a Starbucks, operated by Maxims in Hong Kong, and smashed the cash registers.

The Maxims chain has been a regular target for protesters after Annie Wu Suk-ching, the 71-year-old daughter of the company founder, criticised them.

As police fired tear gas in Tsuen Wan, a canister hit the arm of a Now TV reporter, who was sent to hospital for treatment. An officer was seen firing tear gas rounds from the footbridge where she was standing, without warning, from a moving police van leaving the area.Riot police inside the Festival Walk shopping centre in Kowloon Tong. Photo: Edmond So

Despite the chaotic scenes in Kowloon, across the harbour in the evening, about 2,000 mourners showed up at Chater Garden for a prayer meeting to mourn Chows death.

Ivan Ho, 26, a materials tester, went to the park alone, saying the past week had been overwhelming for him and he wanted to be a part of the crowds moment of silence.

Protesters in Sha Tin trash a Maxims Palace restaurant. Photo: Winson Wong

People like me, in their twenties, are seen as criminals or protesters by police now. You worry simply going out on the street.

We shouldnt do things that are the opposite of what we want to achieve, he said. At this moment we should first seek the truth. Then we should let the judicial system punish whoever was wrong.

The Hospital Authority said that, as of 11pm, 15 people had been taken to hospital with injuries related to the unrest. Seven were in a stable condition and eight had already been discharged.

The masked rioters completely disregard law and order as well as other peoples safety and rights. Their acts are outrageous, he said, adding that the police would continue to take resolute enforcement action to bring all lawbreakers to justice.

On Monday, a call for a citywide strike the third such campaign throughout the movement could disrupt traffic. It will take place as seven lawmakers are due to appear at Eastern Court to hear charges against them for allegedly interfering in a May 15 Legislative Council meeting.

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Hong Kong protests: flash-mob shopping tours, trashed train stations and shops, tear gas and water cannons a - Business Insider India

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