Security ramped up as Hong Kong braces for China anniversary clashes
HONG KONG — Police fanned out across Hong Kong on Tuesday in a bid to deter pro-democracy protests as the city marked communist China’s 70th birthday, with local officials watching a flag-raising ceremony behind closed doors because of security concerns.
Authorities ramped up security checks ahead of the anniversary and announced the closure of more than a dozen subway stations as officers conducted stop and searches in the streets and on public transport.
The international finance hub is on edge as protesters vow to overshadow Beijing’s festivities, stepping up their nearly four months of protests pushing for greater democratic freedoms and police accountability.
Sunday witnessed some of the most sustained clashes in weeks between police and hardcore protesters.
Activists have called for people to hit the streets for a “Day of Grief” — although police banned a proposed rally through the city.
Article continues after this advertisementIn a vivid illustration of the political insecurity now coursing through Hong Kong, city officials watched a morning harborside flag-raising ceremony from the safety of the nearby convention center.
Article continues after this advertisementSince Hong Kong’s 1997 handover to China by Britain, officials had always attended the ceremony outside, even during torrential downpours.
But popular protests that erupted in June have made it increasingly risky for officials to appear in public.
A flag-raising ceremony on July 1 — the anniversary of Hong Kong’s handover — was also watched from indoors as protesters flooded the streets and later laid siege to the city’s legislature.
Rival rallies
On Tuesday morning officials sang the national anthem as they watched the flags of China and Hong Kong being raised in a nearby public square on large television screens.
Two helicopters made a fly-by as coastguard vessels sprayed multiple hoses in the harbor.
Hong Kong’s leader Carrie Lam, who has historically low approval ratings, attended the huge military parade in Beijing with footage showing her smiling as soldiers and hardware filed through Tiananmen Square in a dramatic display of China’s might.
Her de facto deputy, Chief Secretary Matthew Cheung, delivered an address in which he praised China’s development over the last 70 years.
But he said officials recognized they needed “new thinking to try to address deep-rooted problems” in Hong Kong.
There were only small pockets of protests on Tuesday morning.
A group of pro-democracy lawmakers were assaulted by Beijing supporters as they carried a symbolic coffin through the district of Wanchai.
Police quickly intervened to break up the scuffle, briefly using pepper spray.
On the opposite side of the harbor at Tsim Sha Tsui, groups of protesters gathered to sing “Glory to Hong Kong”, an anonymously-penned anthem that has been embraced by the movement.
Around 50 people also gathered on the harborside to wave Chinese flags and shout “Long live our Motherland!”
“We are Chinese and the whole nation is celebrating,” Kitty Chan, 30, told AFP.
She said she was worried by the protests. “But 1.4 billion people have our backs, so we are not scared,” she added, referring to mainland China’s population.
On Monday, police warned Hong Kongers against attending banned protest rallies, adding that intelligence suggested radical protesters were planning “very dangerous” tactics.
But activists decried the police’s decision to ban a march by the Civil Human Rights Front, a group that advocates non-violence.
Millions have hit the streets this summer and hardcore activists have repeatedly clashed with police, in the biggest challenge to China’s rule since the city’s handover.
The protests were initially sparked by a now scrapped plan to allow extraditions to the mainland but have since snowballed into a much wider movement of popular anger against city leaders and Beijing. /muf