Hong Kong was reeling Sunday from some of the worst clashes to rock the city in months after hardcore pro-democracy protesters hurled petrol bombs at police who fired tear gas and deployed water cannon, before making mass arrests inside train stations.
Police had banned a planned demonstration in the financial hub on security grounds, but tens of thousands defied authorities Saturday to march through the city’s main highways for the 13th consecutive weekend.
The rally quickly descended into violent clashes with riot police which stretched into the early hours of Sunday, with officers pursuing protesters into metro stations and making mass arrests.
Video footage captured by local media showed elite police charging and pepper spraying two couples cowering on the floor of a train compartment, with one man crying in anguish as he wrapped his arms around a friend.
[GRAPHIC] Fuller video of the now-infamous train attack scene from HK Prince Edward station last night. It should be clear now @hkpoliceforce is no longer bounded by law in any meaningful sense of the word.
Copyright CC 梁柏堅 Pakkin Leung @ Rice Post#HongKongProtests #antiELAB pic.twitter.com/KdOJ7SZMaR— Paul Huang (@PaulHuangReport) September 1, 2019
A small group of hardcore protesters surrounded the city’s parliament, unleashing a barrage of rocks and petrol bombs at riot police, who responded with tear gas and rubber bullets.
Thick, black smoke swirled from a large fire started by masked demonstrators at a barricade on a major thoroughfare, close to Hong Kong police headquarters.
Police dispersed crowds with water cannon as the night spiraled into a cat-and-mouse chase across the city, with police making numerous arrests.
First time during the #HongKongProtests I felt truly scared. This is the last thing I shot before grabbing a few valuables and evacuating my apartment. Feeling really relieved that firefighters were able to get through to put it out shortly after. pic.twitter.com/rCnwXhS85l
— Chloe Whiteaker (@ChloeWhiteaker) August 31, 2019
“With such escalating violence and progressively lethal weapons of protestors, the safety of police officers and other members of the public is seriously threatened,” police said in a statement.
Police said officers fired two warning shots into the sky after being attacked by group of “violent protesters who attempted to once snatch police pistols.”
VIDEO: 🇭🇰 Protesters set fire to a large roadblock near #HongKong police headquarters in the central #WanChai district of the city. The group used plastic bollards, metal fencing and seating from a nearby sports ground to build the barricade before starting the blaze. pic.twitter.com/BS4oFKUe8C
— AFP News Agency (@AFP) August 31, 2019
Saturday marked the fifth anniversary of Beijing’s rejection of universal suffrage for Hong Kong that sparked the 79-day Umbrella Movement in 2014.
“Peaceful protest doesn’t work,” 22-year-old demonstrator Stone told AFP, giving one name.
As protesters streamed into a nearby metro, graffiti on a pillar inside the station read: “We shall never surrender.”
The hospital authority said Sunday that 31 people were admitted with injuries following the clashes, including five who remain in serious condition.
Beijing’s state news agency, Xinhua, posted a video on Twitter late Saturday of armed Chinese riot police holding “anti-riot drills in Shenzhen”, a city which borders Hong Kong.
Beijing has also unleashed a mix of intimidation, propaganda and economic muscle in an attempt to muzzle the movement, which it views as a direct challenge to its rule.
Ready for combat! Armed police conduct drill in #Shenzhen, S China's Guangdong pic.twitter.com/chMQxY2IfI
— People's Daily, China (@PDChina) September 1, 2019
At least five high-profile activists and three lawmakers were arrested on Friday in a sweep that rights groups said was taken directly from Beijing’s playbook.
Two of the Umbrella Movement’s leaders, Joshua Wong and Agnes Chow, were among those arrested, charged and bailed for “inciting others to take part in unauthorized assembly”.
Police denied the sweep was timed specifically to weaken the weekend’s protests.
More than 900 people have been arrested since June in connection with the protests.
The European Union’s diplomatic chief Federica Mogherini said the developments were “extremely worrying”, while US President Donald Trump said his economic pressure on China was forcing Beijing to take a more moderate line on Hong Kong.
Protesters were preparing to demonstrate again today, with plans to rally at a bus terminal outside the city’s airport, with disruption also expected at train stations en route to the airport.