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HK police clear main road of protesters

Published: 27 Nov 2014 - 12:16 am | Last Updated: 19 Jan 2022 - 08:11 pm

A riot police officer holds a baton as he confronts pro-democracy protesters at Mongkok shopping district in Hong Kong yesterday. RIGHT: A girl is grabbed by policemen during a confrontation.

HONG KONG: Hundreds of Hong Kong police yesterday cleared a pro-democracy protest camp, arresting Joshua Wong and another student leader and reopening a main road blocked for almost two months.
Pushing back protesters, police with the help of workmen removed tents and other obstacles blocking the six-lane Nathan Road in Mongkok district.
It is seen as the most significant move so far in efforts to clear away protest camps at three separate locations in the city, as public sympathy with the
demonstrators wanes.
Scuffles broke out earlier in the day as police wearing helmets and brandishing batons moved in to protect the workmen from the crowds that surged forward to try to stop them tearing down road barricades.
The operation went ahead a day after nearly 150 demonstrators were arrested as authorities cleared a smaller section of the Mongkok protest camp.
Hundreds of police quickly pushed protesters back, and removed wooden and metal barricades, tents and other obstructions along a 500-metre stretch of Nathan Road. Around two hours after the operation started, only a handful of protesters remained at the edge of the site. The movement’s student leaders Wong and Lester Shum were arrested at the scene, according to protest group Scholarism and the Hong Kong Federation of Students.
A well-known protester and member of the League of Social Democrats party, Raphael Wong, who was arrested along with the pair said on his Facebook page that they were being held at a police station.
“I am at the Kwai Chung police station, next to me is Joshua and Lester, we have been charged with contempt of court and obstructing public officers,” Wong wrote.
“It is possible we won’t get bail tonight and will be at a magistrates’ court tomorrow.”
Police were unable to immediately give a reason why the three had been arrested when contacted by AFP.
Tensions were running high yesterday after scuffles the previous day when police used pepper spray on protesters at the site.
Mongkok was the scene of some of the most violent clashes since the sit-ins began in the city on September 28.
“If we lose here, we won’t lose heart. We can go somewhere else (to occupy). It doesn’t need to be here,” Kelvin Ng, 21, told AFP.
Demonstrators are demanding fully free elections for the leadership of the semi-autonomous southern Chinese city in 2017. But China has refused to budge on its arrangements for the poll.
Police said they arrested a total of 148 people, including a 14-year-old boy, in the two-day Mongkok operation and that 22 police officers were injured.
“If anyone attempts to block reopened roads...police are duty bound to take resolute actions,” Police spokesman Hui Chun-tak told media at a briefing
yesterday. Yesterday’s clearance was the third since Hong Kong’s high court granted injunctions ordering the operations, responding to petitions from a building owner and public transport operators. “Please obey the injunction, leave immediately,” a court bailiff told the crowd before the operation began.
Civilians wearing “I love HK” T-shirts and red baseball caps began removing barricades blocking the road but protesters remained defiant.
“I won’t leave. It’s (the sit-in) been illegal from day one with or without the court order,” said one demonstrator, wearing a yellow helmet and a mask, who refused to give his name. AFP