Student protesters hold out as Hong Kong leader urges peaceful resolution

Published Tue, Nov 19, 2019 · 09:35 AM

    [HONG KONG] Hong Kong's embattled leader

    Carrie Lam said on Tuesday she hoped a standoff between police

    and a hold-out group of anti-government protesters at a

    university could be resolved and she had told police to handle

    it humanely.

    About 100 defiant protesters remained in the Hong Kong

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    Polytechnic University, which has been surrounded by police,

    after more than two days of clashes in which more than 200

    people have been injured.

    Mrs Lam spoke shortly after the city's new police chief urged

    the support of all citizens to end more than five months of

    unrest that was triggered by fears that China's central

    government is stifling the city's special autonomy and freedoms.

    In what many will see as an illustration of Beijing's

    tightening grip, China's legislature questioned the legality of

    a Monday Hong Kong court ruling that a ban on face masks worn by

    protesters was unlawful.

    The National People's Congress (NPC) said Hong Kong courts

    had no power to rule on the constitutionality of city

    legislation, the official Xinhua news agency reported.

    Mrs Lam said her government was very much on the "reactive side"

    in dealing with the protests but she did not rule out more

    violence even as she urged peace.

    "If the protesters are coming out in a peaceful manner ...

    then there is no situation when that sort of violence would

    happen," she said.

    However, police would have to take "necessary action" if the

    situation changed, she said. Mrs Lam said she had been shocked that

    campuses had been turned into "weapons factories".

    On the sprawling Polytechnic campus in the Kowloon district,

    a sense of despair prevailed amid the shriek of fire alarms on

    Tuesday afternoon.

    "I feel I'm in trouble, I feel a little bit terrible," said

    a 22-year-old who gave his name as Marcus.

    He and two friends sat in the campus canteen at a table

    piled with dirty dishes and plastic cups, debating their

    options.

    "We keep trying to think how to escape, but every time we

    pick a spot we see many police nearby," Marcus said.

    "But if we give up, we're finished."

    THWARTED SEWER ESCAPE

    The university is the last of five that protesters occupied

    to use as bases from which to disrupt the city, blocking the

    central cross-harbour tunnel and main roads and forcing the

    closure of businesses including shopping centres, in order, they

    said, to put the government under economic pressure.

    Mrs Lam said 600 protesters had left the Polytechnic campus,

    including 200 below the age of 18.

    Hundreds of them fled from the university or surrendered

    overnight amid running battles on nearby streets as police fired

    tear gas, water cannon and rubber bullets and protesters lobbed

    petrol bombs and bricks.

    At one stage, dozens of protesters staged a dramatic escape

    by shimmying down plastic hosing from a bridge and fleeing on

    waiting motorbikes as police fired projectiles.

    Later on Tuesday, about a dozen protesters tried to flee

    through the university's sewerage system. A Reuters witness who

    saw them lower themselves into a tunnel wearing gas masks and

    plastic sheets to cover their bodies.

    They were not able to escape and had to retreat back onto

    the campus.

    'COME HOME SAFELY'

    Many protesters say they fear more bloodshed in a standoff

    that has seen some of the most intense violence in what has

    become the worst crisis since Hong Kong's return from British to

    Chinese rule in 1997.

    One woman said her son was inside the campus with his

    girlfriend and they would come out but for the fear of facing

    charges of rioting, which can carry a 10-year sentence.

    "I know the young people see there are many unrighteous

    things in society, they want to do something to change it," said

    the woman, who gave her name as Chan, 50.

    "But as parents, we only have one wish. We only want all of

    them to come home safely."

    Protesters were initially angered by a now-withdrawn bill

    that could have sent people to mainland China for trial but

    their campaign has broadened into calls for full democracy and

    an end to what many see as meddling by Beijing in China's freest

    city.

    China says it is committed to the "one country, two systems"

    formula granting Hong Kong autonomy and has accused foreign

    countries, including Britain and the United States, of inciting

    trouble.

    Dennis Kwok, a lawmaker with the pro-democracy Civic party,

    denounced the NPC statement on the court ruling as "shocking".

    "This is not the time to burn down your own house or to

    destroy the rule of law in Hong Kong. Respect the courts in Hong

    Kong, respect our system - this is the essence of 'one country

    two systems'," he said.

    Hundreds of people, many office workers wearing masks,

    gathered in the business district on Tuesday afternoon.

    Police hemmed them in and the protest was largely peaceful.

    Such "flash mob" protests in the heart of the city have

    happened on a daily basis over the past week, but the number of

    people demonstrating has fallen.

    However, the violence has worsened since last week, when

    police shot a protester, a man was set on fire and the financial

    district was filled with tear gas in the middle of the workday.

    The city's Cross Harbour Tunnel linking Hong Kong island to

    Kowloon remained shut on Tuesday due to extensive damage, while

    some train services and many roads were closed.

    All schools were shut again.

    The unrest poses the gravest popular challenge to Chinese

    President Xi Jinping since he came to power in 2012.

    REUTERS

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