More than 500 demonstrators arrested for illegally 'occupying' street in
Central business district during pro-democracy protest
Guardian
Hong Kong police
have arrested more than 500 protesters for illegally "occupying" a
street in the city's central business district, hours after hundreds of
thousands of residents gathered for the city's biggest pro-democracy
demonstration in recent history.
While the arrested
protesters represented a wide cross-section of Hong Kong society, most of those
arrested were students who had pledged to flood the street until 8am on
Wednesday, despite vows by police to take "decisive action" if the
"unlawful assembly" were to proceed.
A protester is carried away by police officers. Photograph: Bobby
Yip/Reuters
Police began
bundling away protesters at 3am on Wednesday, and continued until the end of
the sit-in, when the remaining crowd – about 50 people – let out a cheer and
dispersed on its own. No one has yet been formally charged.
Protesters are taken away by police officers after hundreds staged
peaceful sit-ins in the financial district in Hong Kong. Photograph: Kin
Cheung/AP
Videos online
showed blue-uniformed police carrying protesters by their arms and legs, and
pushing them away on wheelchairs.
Protesters chant slogans during an overnight sit-in on a street at Hong
Kong's financial central district . Photograph: Bobby Yip/Reuters
"The reason we
are here is for universal suffrage and the future of our democracy," one
protester shouted, according to local media.
Some protesters
have been accused of "participating in an unauthorised assembly" and
"obstructing police," Reuters reported; about 50 protesters have been
released without charge.
"The operation
is still ongoing and police express regret over the uncooperative and illegal
acts of the participants of the public meeting," said a statement posted
to the Hong Kong police force's website on
Wednesday.
Jonathan Lam, an
attorney who is giving pro bono legal counsel to the detained protesters, said
that about 300 have already been released – some on bail, most with only a
warning – and that the remaining 200 will likely be released soon.
"This is
probably the first time in Hong Kong, or at least one of the first, that [the
police] have arrested such a massive number of people on one occasion," he
said, adding that the police were "confused" and disorganised, and
neglected to give the detainees an adequate amount of food and water.
"I just hope
the remaining 200 people will be released very soon, and that the next time the
police organise such a big arrest, they'll be more prepared," he said.
The 1 July protest is
held each year in Hong Kong to mark the anniversary of the former British
colony's return to mainland control in 1997. The protest's organiser, the Civil
Human Rights Front, said 510,000 people marched at its peak, while police
estimated a headcount of 98,600. The protest was spirited but peaceful,
and no incidents of violence or vandalism were reported.
Beijing controls
Hong Kong under the principle of "one country, two systems", granting
the region a range of civil liberties and independent institutions that do not
exist on the mainland. Yet many residents feel that as Beijing's economic and
political clout grows, their independence has begun to wane.
The two student
groups who organised the sit-in – Scholarism and the Hong Kong Federation of
Students – described the act as a "rehearsal" for Occupy Central with
Love and Peace (OCLP), a larger civil disobedience movement planned for later
this year. On Sunday night, OCLP wrapped up an unofficial "referendum"
in which nearly 800,000 people – more than 10% of Hong Kong's population –
votesd. The vast majority of them requested the ability to choose their own top
leader by a process of public nomination, a possibility which Beijing
categorically rejects.
China's
state media did not cover Tuesday's protest. The state broadcaster CCTV said in
a brief report that
Hong Kong residents gathered en masse to celebrate the anniversary of the 1997
handover, with 300,000 people participating in about 17 events throughout the
city.
The People's Daily,
a Communist party mouthpiece, reaffirmed in a front-page editorial on Wednesday that
it would require the leaders of Hong Kong to be "patriots" who
"love the country, and love Hong Kong".
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