Activists slam Hong Kong police warning of holiday violence

Activists slam Hong Kong police warning of holiday violence
Hong Kong police warned Monday (Sep. 30) of the potential for protesters in the semi-autonomous Chinese territory to engage in violence “one step closer to terrorism” during this week’s National Day events, an assertion ridiculed by activists as propaganda meant to scare people from taking to the streets.

Police public relations chief Tse Chun-chung said police intelligence suggested hard-line protesters were inciting others to commit “extreme acts” such as killing police, posing as police officials to kill civilians and large-scale arson including at gas stations during Tuesday’s holiday.

“We are on the verge of extreme danger,” Tse told a news conference. “There are apparent signs that hard-core violence may escalate. Those acts are one step closer to terrorism.”

Lawmaker Claudia Mo called the police intelligence “a joke,” saying the warning echoed one made by a Chinese-government newspaper days earlier.

“This is Chinese propaganda at play,” she said. “What’s more worrying is that police have admitted to its officials masquerading as protesters. So who will be the arsonists? Who will be the murderers? The goal is to institute fear in society so that people will be scared to go out. This is a despicable tactic.”

Echoing that view was Bonnie Leung of the Civil Human Rights Front, which has organized several massive rallies in nearly four months of anti-government protests.

Authorities are looking to avoid any potential violence on National Day, as showdowns could embarrass Chinese President Xi Jinping as his ruling Communist Party marks 70 years since taking power.

Civil Human Rights Front’s request for a march to be held Tuesday through the city center was rejected by police. An appeals board on Monday upheld the ban. The group warned that denying a peaceful avenue for protesters could accelerate violence because citizens will turn up anyway, as they’ve done in past when rallies were banned.

“Hong Kong is losing its freedom of speech and assembly. Hong Kong is becoming more and more like a police state, like a tyranny like Beijing,” she said.

Apart from the march, other rallies are planned in multiple locations Tuesday, with posters calling for Oct. 1 to be marked as “A Day of Grief.”

The government has tightened security near a convention center where a muted National Day reception will be held indoors Tuesday. The public will be barred from watching the flag-raising ceremony at a square outside the center in the morning and an annual firework display has been cancelled.

Tse, the public relations chief, said violence escalated over the weekend, especially during a melee Sunday in the heart of the city’s business and shopping district that lasted late into the night.

He said protesters lobbed more than 100 gasoline bombs, set large street blazes and attacked police. In response, police fired water cannons and used 328 tear gas canisters and other projectiles to clear the crowd. He said one officer had to fire a bullet in the air after protesters surrounded him.

He said 157 people, aged between 12 and 53, were detained over the weekend. Local media reported more than two dozen people, including a foreign journalist, were injured.

Local media also reported that three people, including an actor and activist, were detained Monday over their participation in the protests. Police couldn’t immediately confirm this when contacted by The Associated Press.

Based on AP

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