Hong Kong protest at police HQ ends peacefully

Hong Kong protest at police HQ ends peacefully

Protesters in Hong Kong have ended their overnight siege of police headquarters peacefully.

By daybreak, police had cleared the streets of barriers set up by protesters to snarl traffic in the Asian financial centre, and only a few groups in the mostly youthful crowd remained.

Many slept outside the legislature.

Traffic was again smooth on a major thoroughfare through the government’s central complex as the protest movement regrouped to consider next moves.

Police said nine female and four male staffers were taken to hospital “with considerable delay” during the blockade.

Hong Kong Protests
Protesters ended their overnight siege of the police headquarters peacefully (Vincent Yu/AP)

Around police headquarters, masked and helmeted protesters covered surveillance cameras with masking tape and lashed barriers together with nylon cable ties.

They threw eggs at the building and drew graffiti on the walls. Protesters also “splashed oil” and targeted police officers’ eyes with laser pointers, according to the police.

Hong Kong has been rocked by major protests for the past two weeks over legislative proposals that many view as eroding the territory’s judicial independence and, more broadly, as a sign of Chinese government efforts to chip away at the city’s freedoms.

Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam indefinitely suspended debate on the bills a week ago.

But protesters are demanding that she formally withdraw the proposed changes to the extradition laws, which would expand the scope of criminal suspect transfers to include mainland China, Taiwan and Macau.

Some also want Ms Lam to resign.

Hong Kong Protests
Demands for the territory’s leader to formally withdraw a contentious extradition bill went unmet (Vincent Yu/AP)

The peaceful ending to Friday’s protests drew a sigh of relief in the city of 7.4 million people, after police unleashed tear gas and rubber bullets last week in violent clashes that left dozens injured on both sides.

Police were previously criticised for their use of force but this time waited out the protesters.

Police did issue a statement at 4.50am local time condemning them for blocking key streets and seriously disrupting work at police headquarters.

“Police have shown the greatest tolerance to the protesters who assembled outside PHQ, but their means of expressing views have become illegal, irrational and unreasonable,” the statement said in part.

Activist Joshua Wong called on police to answer demands over heavy-handed tactics used during a mass protest on June 12, including the firing of 150 rounds of tear gas, rubber bullets and beanbag rounds, and the beating of unarmed protesters by police with truncheons.

“We … urge police to apologise to the people” over the use of such tactics and their labelling of the gathering as a riot, Mr Wong said.

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