Pro-democracy protesters in Hong Kong have appealed to Donald Trump to help them as their latest march descended into violent clashes with police.

Thousands of people, many carrying US flags, marched to the US consulate to deliver petitions before police used tear gas to disperse them after fires were started in an upmarket district.

Turmoil on Hong Kong streets seems unsolvable

The US national anthem, The Star Spangled Banner, was sung by demonstrators, who urged the US president to "liberate" the city.

Some carried banners reading: "President Trump, please save Hong Kong" and "Make Hong Kong great again".

Others shouted slogans such as: "Fight for freedom, stand with Hong Kong" and "Resist Beijing, liberate Hong Kong."


Activists are calling on the US to pass a proposed "Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act", which Democratic Senators are pushing for consideration next week.

Later, in a familiar pattern, some of the protesters set barricades, smashed windows, started street fires and attacked a metro station in the upmarket Central district.

Cardboard boxes were set alight as demonstrators built barricades with metal fencing before police responded, as they did in similar circumstances on Saturday, by using tear gas to disperse marchers in nearby Causeway Bay.

Sky's special correspondent, Alex Crawford, in Hong Kong, said "there was a lot of chaos", describing how protesters destroyed traffic lights as they moved through the main commercial area.

A pro-democracy demonstrator dressed as the Statue of Liberty is skateboarding down Hennessy Road; in keeping with the theme of petitioning the U.S. ahead of the Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act going before Congress. #反送中 #antiELAB #HongKongProtests pic.twitter.com/9oCtIs1zF8 — Jack Hazlewood (@JackHHazlewood) September 8, 2019

Protesters dressed in their customary black, were armed, she said, with "iron bars, shovels and wheelbarrows full of bricks".

Image: Protesters carried a wheelbarrow full of bricks as demonstrations turned violent

When confronted by police, they "ran in different directions, many into shopping malls where they changed into other clothes before melting away.

"There is a great deal of anger towards police," she said, "over allegations of brutality and sexual violence towards female protesters."

Image: Protesters marched through Hong Kong

The protests, now in their 14th straight week, have continued even as Hong Kong's leaders met one of the protesters' key demands by withdrawing a contested extradition bill.

The proposal would have meant that criminals could be extradited to the Chinese mainland - a move which activists argued would tamper with the region's autonomy.

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Protesters say embattled chief executive Carrie Lam's withdrawal of the bill, marking an attempt to restore order in the city, is too little, too late.

The demonstrations have since evolved into calls for more democracy and the withdrawal of the bill is only one of the protesters' five key demands.

Image: Tens of thousands marching to the US Consulate

China, which is backing Ms Lam, has consistently warned other countries not to interfere.

Image: Protesters wore protective clothing

It says the situation in Hong Kong, a former British colony handed back to China in 1997, is purely its own internal affair.

Image: Tens of thousands of people marched on Sunday

On Saturday, US defence secretary Mark Esper urged China to exercise restraint.