Hong Kong riot police used pepper spray to disperse protesters around government headquarters today, fuelling tension ahead of a planned sit-in by pro-democracy activists to protest against Beijing's tightening grip on the city.
Clashes through the night between police carrying riot shields and demonstrators underscore the challenges China faces in shaping its vision for Hong Kong's political future as a restive younger generation challenges its influence in the former British colony.
Several people suffered minor injuries.
Police cleared the remaining scores of protesters who had forced their way into the city’s main government compound last night.
They were removed one by one, with some carried away, according to witnesses. Many protesters were still sitting outside the government compound today.
"The police have used disproportionate force to stop the legitimate actions of the students and that should be condemned," said Benny Tai, one of the three main organizers of the pro-democracy movement.
Hundreds of students and demonstrators had forced their way past a police cordon and scaled perimeter fences at government headquarters, close to Hong Kong’s financial district, last night in the culmination of a week-long rally to demand free elections in the Asian financial centre.
Police carried signs that read “stop charging or we use force”.
Several thousand protesters massed on streets outside the headquarters in support of those who had stormed inside, shouting “retreat, retreat, retreat” as police advanced and tried to stop them charging.
Many protesters used umbrellas to shield them from pepper spray, while those who got hit used water to rinse their eyes.
"I paid my highest respect to every soldier who defends till the last moment ... civil disobedience, it continues to happen," student leader Lester Shum said on his Facebook page.
Hong Kong returned from British to Chinese rule in 1997 under a formula known as "one country, two systems", with a high degree of autonomy and freedoms not enjoyed in mainland China. Universal suffrage was set as an eventual goal.
But Beijing last month rejected demands for people to freely choose the city’s next leader in 2017, prompting threats from activists to shut down the Central financial district in a so-called Occupy Central campaign. China wants to limit elections to a handful of candidates loyal to Beijing.
Leaders of the Occupy movement arrived to show their support. They plan a blockade on October 1st, a holiday, that organizers hope will escalate into one of most disruptive protests seen for decades.
The clashes were the most heated so far in a series of anti-Beijing protests. Police arrested six people, including teenage student leader Joshua Wong, who was dragged away by police, kicking, screaming and bleeding from his arm, after he called on the protesters to charge the government premises.
“Hong Kong’s future belongs to you, you and you,” Wong, a thin 17-year-old with dark-rimmed glasses and bowl-cut hair, told cheering supporters before he was taken away.
“I want to tell CY Leung and Xi Jinping that the mission of fighting for universal suffrage does not rest upon the young people, it is everyone’s responsibility,” he shouted, referring to Hong Kong’s and China’s leaders.
“I don’t want the fight for democracy to be passed down to the next generation. This is our responsibility.”
The protest came after more than 1,000 school pupils rallied peacefully to support university students demanding democracy, capping a week-long campaign that has seen classroom strikes and a large cut-out depicting the city’s leader as the devil paraded in public.
Reuters