HK protests

Petrol bombs, fire mar generally peaceful march

No major disruptions reported after demonstration on Sunday

A worker cleaning a wall vandalised in the rally held on Sunday. PHOTO: ASSOCIATED PRESS
A worker cleaning a wall vandalised in the rally held on Sunday. PHOTO: ASSOCIATED PRESS

HONG KONG • Protesters lit a fire outside court buildings, threw petrol bombs and spray-painted graffiti on government buildings following a "generally peaceful" march at the weekend, the Hong Kong police said yesterday.

Protesters called for strikes across the city yesterday, but most railway and transport links ran smoothly during the morning rush hour, and there were no reports of widespread disruptions.

Vast crowds of black-clad demonstrators had thronged the streets of the Asian financial hub on Sunday, in the largest anti-government rally since local elections last month and a resounding show of continued support for the pro-democracy movement.

While the march appeared to be largely peaceful - in marked contrast to some mass demonstrations over the last six months, where protesters fought pitched battles with police - the authorities said there was some damage after it ended.

"Although the event was generally peaceful, acts of breaching public peace happened afterwards," the police said in a statement.

"Some rioters spray-painted the exterior walls of the High Court, threw petrol bombs and set fire outside the High Court and the Court of Final Appeal, damaging government properties and seriously challenging the spirit of the rule of law," the police said, adding that shops and banks were vandalised in the Causeway Bay and Wan Chai areas of Hong Kong Island.

Reuters reporters at the march on Sunday saw graffiti and protesters setting up barricades, but were not in the vicinity of the other incidents.

The Hong Kong Bar Association condemned what it called "acts of arson and vandalism", and said those responsible must be brought to justice.

Protesters estimated the turnout at 800,000, while the police said it was 183,000. The police also said they arrested 42 people over the weekend for rioting, possessing weapons and other charges, and added that about 6,000 people have been arrested in relation to the unrest since early June.

In an editorial, the official China Daily newspaper called on the Hong Kong government to uphold the rule of law.

"Many residents in Hong Kong are fed up with the violence and disruption that have plagued the city for months," said the newspaper, often used by Beijing to put out its messages.

Hong Kong's new police commissioner had said he would take a "hard and soft approach" to the demonstrations, where acts of violence would be treated harshly, but other issues more flexibly.

The chairman and the president of the American Chamber of Commerce (AmCham) in Hong Kong were denied entry over the weekend to the neighbouring Chinese territory of Macau, without explanation. Macau's security chief, Mr Wong Sio Chak, said yesterday that security concerns were the only reason for barring entry into the city, broadcaster RTHK reported.

AmCham chairman Robert Grieves and president Tara Joseph had been travelling to Macau for an annual ball.

Mr Wong declined to comment specifically on their cases and said it was speculation that their refusal was linked to Beijing's response to United States legislation backing pro-democracy protesters in Hong Kong, RTHK said.

US President Donald Trump last month signed into law the Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act, linking the former British colony's special treatment under US law to its autonomy from Beijing.

The unrest in the city of about 7.4 million people started in June as demonstrations against a now-withdrawn Bill allowing extradition to the mainland. It has since morphed into calls for greater democratic freedoms and sometimes violent protests.

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on December 10, 2019, with the headline Petrol bombs, fire mar generally peaceful march. Subscribe