Hong Kong Live Blog (Mong Kok Clearing): About a Hundred Protesters Settle in Sai Yeung Choi Street

Follow our live coverage of the police clearing of Mong Kok.
11/24/2014
Updated:
11/26/2014

Follow our live coverage of the police clearing of Mong Kok.

See an article of earlier and developing events here.

All times are in Hong Kong time, which is thirteen hours ahead of Eastern Standard Time.

Check out some older footage and a live stream below.

 

MORE: Students Not Radicals, Hong Kong Police Suggest in Statement for Mong Kok Clearing

See an Associated Press story about the clearance below.

Hong Kong to Clear More Protest Barricades

HONG KONG (AP) — Hong Kong authorities said they will remove some barricades Tuesday from part of a pro-democracy protest site in Mong Kok district, scene of previous violent confrontations with police and angry mobs.

The government said in a statement late Monday that police will be on hand to assist bailiffs working under a court order to remove obstructions from the site, which activists have occupied for nearly two months. It said police are authorized to arrest anyone obstructing the bailiffs.

Protesters have been camped out on major thoroughfares in three areas of Hong Kong since Sept. 28 demanding greater democracy. The standoff has continued with no end in sight as neither the government nor the student-led protesters have shown any willingness to compromise.

Authorities last week started enforcing court orders against protest sites. They removed some barricades from the edge of the main protest area, next to the city government headquarters, while protesters offered little resistance.

The barricade clearances come at a critical phase for the protest movement, as student leaders run out of options, and public support and the number of demonstrators dwindle.

More than 80 percent of 513 people surveyed last week by Hong Kong University researchers said the protesters should go home. The poll had a margin of error of 4.4 percentage points. A separate survey by the Chinese University of Hong Kong released days earlier found about two-thirds of 1,030 respondents felt the same way.

The operation on Tuesday is being carried out after Hong Kong’s High Court granted a restraining order to a minibus company requiring protesters to leave one of the occupied Mong Kok streets. A separate court order granted to taxi drivers to clear another Mong Kok street is expected to be enforced on Wednesday.