Hong Kong Police Show Up in Force to Clear Mong Kok; Tents, Barricades, Banners Torn Down (+Photos)

Hong Kong police turn up in force at Mong Kok on Friday morning and started to clear the protest site.
Hong Kong Police Show Up in Force to Clear Mong Kok; Tents, Barricades, Banners Torn Down (+Photos)
Police and pro-democracy protesters stand off on a small section of Nathan Road after the police came in early in the morning and removed all of the barriers in the surrounding areas in Mong Kok, Hong Kong, on Oct. 17, 2014. (Benjamin Chasteen/Epoch Times)
10/16/2014
Updated:
6/24/2015

Hong Kong police turn up in force at Mong Kok on Friday morning (October 17) and started to clear the protest site.

At about 5:30 a.m. Hong Kong Time (5:30 p.m. EDT), police suddenly showed up at the Mong Kok protest site, gave the protesters 15 minutes to pack up their stuff, and proceeded to clear out the area.

The police said that they were clearing Nathan Road and Argyle Street for traffic to pass.

Tents, barricades, and banners were reportedly torn down.


News is breaking, check back for updates.

See an Associated Press report below on an earlier Occupy Central incident.

Hong Kong police hold back from removing barriers

HONG KONG (AP) — Police briefly scuffled with protesters camped out in Hong Kong’s streets early Thursday, but held back from dismantling barricades erected by the activists pushing for greater democracy in the Chinese territory.

Public anger simmered over video showing police kicking a handcuffed protester on Wednesday night, an incident that happened when police charged the mostly student demonstrators occupying a highway underpass, using pepper spray and dragging dozens away.

Police used pepper spray again after midnight Thursday to push back crowds trying to occupy a road outside the government’s headquarters. Police said two protesters were arrested, one for kicking a bottle at a private car and one for assaulting police, and three officers were injured.

The police beating appeared to mark a change in mood for many protesters.

“I used to say at every rally that frontline police officers were just following orders. We shouldn’t hurt frontline officers because we were angry or because we blamed them. Frontline officers were just doing their jobs,” Joshua Wong, the 18-year old leader of Scholarism, one of three main groups leading the protests, told a rally Wednesday evening at the main protest zone in Admiralty.

“But I won’t say this again at future rallies. If they’re just doing they’re work, why do they have to beat people?”

The two sides appear to be engaged in a cat-and-mouse game as the protests go into their third week.

Earlier this week, police had removed barriers on the edges of the protest zones in an apparent attempt to chip away at the three main protest zones that have blocked traffic and angered some local businesses.

Protesters reacted to those moves by building bamboo structures that police dismantled, and later moved into an underpass that police on Wednesday cleared them out of forcefully.

Public anger over the aggressive tactics used by police Wednesday night erupted after local TV showed officers taking a protester around a dark corner and kicking him repeatedly on the ground. It’s unclear what provoked the attack. Local Now TV showed him splashing water on officers beforehand.

Protester Ken Tsang said he was kicked while he was “detained and defenseless.” He added that he was assaulted again in the police station afterward. Tsang, a member of a pro-democracy political party, lifted his shirt to show reporters injuries to his torso and said he is considering legal action against police.

Police spokesman Steve Hui said seven officers who were involved have been temporarily reassigned, and that authorities will carry out an impartial investigation.

Several hundred people turned up at Hong Kong police headquarters on Wednesday night for a protest organized by a social workers’ union over the treatment of Tsang, who is also a social worker. They lined up to file individual complaints about the beating.

“He was handcuffed already, he was not able to resist but still he was beaten,” said Maggie Yuen, one of the protesters. “I don’t see any explanation other than that the police abuse their authority.”

The demonstrators have taken to the streets since Sept. 26 to oppose the Chinese central government’s decision to screen candidates to run in the territory’s first direct elections in 2017. They also want the territory’s unpopular leader who was picked by Beijing, Chief Executive Leung Chan-ying, to resign.

China’s central government is becoming increasingly impatient with the mostly peaceful demonstrations, the biggest challenge to its authority since China took control of the former British colony in 1997. There were no signs, however, that Beijing was planning to become directly involved in suppressing them.

Larry Ong is a New York-based journalist with Epoch Times. He writes about China and Hong Kong. He is also a graduate of the National University of Singapore, where he read history.
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