South China Morning Post Hong Kong’s student protesters back with a vengeance as all-out chaos erupts on city’s streets

This story is being published as part of a content partnership with the South China Morning Post. It originally appeared on scmp.com on June 12, 2019.

Hong Kong descended into all-out chaos on Wednesday, with police firing tear gas and rubber bullets at rioting protesters, as tens of thousands surrounded the city’s administrative center to block lawmakers from debating the government’s highly divisive extradition bill.


For the first time in the city’s history, riot police used tear gas and smoke bombs inside the Legislative Council building to beat back protesters trying to storm the premises after camping outside overnight and taking over all access roads to the Admiralty compound in the morning.

Students and youths were back with a vengeance, this time seemingly more organized and prepared for the showdown with face masks, goggles and makeshift body armor, their actions coordinated spontaneously on the ground and through encrypted messaging.

Umbrellas were also back as protection from pepper spray and batons as protesters repeatedly charged police lines in scenes reminiscent of and even more intense than the Occupy protests of 2014, when demonstrators demanding greater democracy brought key parts of Hong Kong to a standstill for 79 straight days.

More than 70 people were injured in the clashes, including protesters, police officers and journalists.

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“Withdraw!” was the slogan of the day, urging Chief Executive Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor to shelve the bill at the center of the storm which would allow the transfer of fugitive suspects to mainland China and other jurisdictions the city has no extradition deal with.

The violence prompted Legco president Andrew Leung Kwan-yuen, who had set the stage for the bill to be passed by the pro-establishment majority in the legislature as early as next Thursday, to cancel Wednesday’s scheduled second reading.

The city’s No. 2 official, Chief Secretary Matthew Cheung Kin-chung, first issued a video message urging protesters to disperse, while the chief executive did not mince words as she followed up with her own video statement at night to appeal for calm and condemn the violence and chaos.

“Clearly, this was no longer a peaceful assembly, but the public and organized instigation of a riot. This could not be an act that shows love for Hong Kong,” she said.

“Some people resorted to dangerous, or even potentially fatal, acts. These include arson, using sharpened iron bars and hurling bricks to attack police officers, as well as destroying public facilities.”

In an interview recorded earlier with broadcaster TVB, a tearful Lam rejected her critics’ accusations that she was “betraying Hong Kong” by bulldozing the bill through the legislature.

“To say I have sold out Hong Kong, how could I have? I grew up here with all other Hongkongers. My love for this place has prompted me to make many personal sacrifices,” she said.

Police commissioner Stephen Lo Wai-chung condemned protesters for escalating an initially peaceful morning gathering at Tim Mei Avenue outside the legislature by rushing onto Lung Wo Road, Tim Mei Avenue, Queensway and Harcourt Road, blocking traffic, stopping commuters, trapping drivers in their vehicles and clashing with officers deployed there.

“They used very dangerous weapons, like sharpened metal bars, throwing barricades and bricks at us,” Lo said, describing it as a riot. “These acts are very dangerous and can kill people.”

While protesters accused police of using excessive force, and even some government officials privately questioned whether they had failed to take adequate action to start off with, Lo insisted his officers had it under control and did not require help from the city’s People’s Liberation Army garrison.

“There is no need at this moment. We are confident and believe we are capable of controlling the situation,” he said.

In Beijing, foreign ministry spokesman Geng Shuang dismissed rumors that the PLA could be brought in for the first time.

“I can clearly tell you that this is a fallacy being spread to deceive people and create panic,” he said.

Geng also demanded foreign parties stay out of China’s internal affairs after U.S. House speaker Nancy Pelosi issued a statement decrying the “horrific” bill and even threatening to review Hong Kong’s special trading privileges.

More than 5,000 officers had been deployed since Tuesday night, working 12-hour shifts in anticipation of trouble, and hundreds more were brought in to clear the road blockades and drive the crowds away.

After multiple clashes that saw police using rubber bullets and beanbag rounds for the first time against demonstrators, the riot squads managed to chase most of the protesters to Queensway, where hundreds regrouped outside the Pacific Place shopping center and became locked in a stand-off with police into the night.

Admiralty MTR station was closed as police scattered die-hard protesters in two different directions towards Wan Chai and Central.

Hundreds spilled out onto Hennessy Road, while others made a stand on Connaught Road, bringing traffic to a standstill between Admiralty and Central at the heart of the city’s business hub.

Tensions also ran high on Harcourt Road, near the PLA headquarters, as protesters built makeshift barriers to keep police at bay.

While there was no sign of pro-establishment lawmakers on Wednesday, their opposition rivals held a press conference to ramp up their demands for the bill to be shelved, with Democratic Party chairman Wu Chi-wai warning of a further escalation if Lam did not give in.

“More and more Hongkongers are willing to pay any price to safeguard the core values of the city,” he said.

Galvanized by the massive turnout during last Sunday’s anti-extradition bill rally – more than a million, according to organizers – youths on the streets were out to show solidarity as well as defiance on Wednesday.

University student Ricky Chow, 22, was helping run a supply station during the day for protesters at the junction of Harcourt Road and Tim Mei Avenue.

“As a student and a citizen, I think I am obliged to help,” he said.

Community leaders, religious groups and professional organizations added their voices to the calls for calm, urging the Lam administration to withdraw the bill and defuse public anger.

One group of former political appointees to the government, including former labor and welfare minister Stephen Sui Wai-keung, sent an open letter to the chief executive, appealing to her to “create room for rational discussion on the bill in the community”.

Former financial secretary and chief executive candidate John Tsang Chun-wah also issued a video expressing sadness and appealing directly to police, young protesters and the public to de-escalate the situation.

Protestant, Catholic, Muslim and Buddhist leaders issued a joint statement, saying: “Society has been seriously divided over the extradition bill. We hope the government and the public will seek common ground while reconciling differences.”

But with Lam’s government doubling down on the bill, and Beijing highly unlikely to back off in the face of what it has characterized as a direct challenge by foreign governments to China’s sovereignty over Hong Kong, the crisis looks set to continue.

Reporting by Phila Siu, Sum Lok-kei, Alvin Lum, Su Xinqi, Chris Lau, Kinling Lo, Victor Ting and Rachel Yeo

