Monday 12 August 2019

Hong Kong falls into chaos

Escalation in Hong Kong


Hal Turner is reporting that Chinese troops have been moving into Hong Kong. Apart from the video below, which doesn't really reveal anything very much there seems to be nothing to back this up except for reportage on the violence.

I have been checking (including Twitter) and I am sure that if anything of this nature was afoot we would know it outside of right-wing US sites.

However, having said that anything is possible (if not probable) in this world of ours




The Chinese government has begun moving troops across the Shenzhen Qianhai Guangshen Coastal Expressway Bridge into Hong Kong minutes ago, in a military operation to put down protests against the government of Beijing.

Hundreds of military trucks carrying soldiers and guns are moving at this hour across the Bridge into Hong Kong.

Enormous Columns of military trucks are entering the city





This is from the South China Morning Post






Police fired tear gas at protesters in an enclosed railway station for the first time, stepping up the use of force as Hong Kong was rocked by another weekend of violent anti-government demonstrations across multiple districts.


Casualties were reported on both sides after parts of Tsim Sha Tsui, Sham Shui Po, Wan Chai and Kwai Chung became smoking war zones once again on Sunday, with protesters continuing their new hit-and-run tactics to stay one step ahead of police who responded to bricks and petrol bombs with barrages of tear gas and baton charges.


According to the Hospital Authority, as of 11.30pm on Sunday, 13 people – nine men and four women – had been injured in protests and sent to hospitals across the city. They are aged 17 to 56. Nine had been discharged, and a man and woman were still in serious condition.


The ground-level concourse of the Kwai Fong MTR station was filled with smoke as riot police first fired tear gas into the building at retreating protesters, then stormed inside and opened fire again.

Police on Sunday fire tear gas at protesters in Tsim Sha Tsui. The tourist hub became a battlefield and its police station came under attack for the second straight day. Photo: Felix Wong

Protesters had been heading towards the nearby Kwai Chung Police Station for another flash mob-style siege when they were driven back.


Tear gas was used after multiple warnings and MTR announcements that the station was closed and trains would not be stopping at Kwai Fong, except for additional ones arranged to pick up people already inside.


A man in protest gear was seen lying on the platform, with blood running from his nose, while other protesters were helping him. Video footage also showed a stationary train at a platform with people still inside.


There was more trouble later at Tai Koo station, with riot police charging inside to grab protesters who had been moving from one station to another.


Video footage showed officers at the top of a long, steep escalator beating protesters, while tear gas fumes filled the air.


One of those who fell to the ground during the skirmish was an elderly woman who has become a prominent fixture with a British flag at anti-government rallies that first began more than two months ago, triggered by the government’s now-abandoned extradition bill.


Tensions remained high in North Point, a potentially dangerous hotspot where hundreds from the city’s close-knit Fujianese community, bolstered by clan reinforcements from mainland China and the Philippines, waited to confront any protester arriving in their neighbourhood.


But with police out in force and protesters staying away from North Point, there were only isolated incidents of Fujianese becoming belligerent and attacking some passers-by and journalists at the scene.


The tourist hub of Tsim Sha Tsui became a battlefield again and the police station came under attack for the second straight day, with protesters throwing petrol bombs over the barriers protecting the building front.

Police also fired tear gas at protesters in Wan Chai on Sunday. Photo: Sam Tsang

Police fired tear gas at them from inside, and at one point at night, riot officers from the Special Tactical Squad charged out to disperse protesters attacking them from the Park Lane Shopper’s Boulevard, where they had blocked a key thoroughfare – the section of Nathan Road between Austin and Salisbury roads.


The “raptors”, as officers from the squad are known, beat protesters with batons and made several arrests.


A female protester was treated by paramedics at the scene, her face bleeding after she was hit by a beanbag round, according to witnesses. A policeman inside the station suffered burns to his legs after being hit by a petrol bomb.

From Chinese media


From the protesters


  1.   Retweeted
    Shocking footage of riot police charging into a subway station pursuing pro-democracy activists and firing into them at point blank range. I’ve seen police being provoked here but I’m speechless. Carrie Lam says no police inquiry needed they’re investigating themselves.
    />


    0:31
    82K views

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