HONG KONG: Two students leading pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong were arrested on Wednesday (Nov 26), as police began clearing a protest site in Mong Kok district.
Lester Shum of Hong Kong Federation of Students and Joshua Wong of Scholarism were taken away as authorities began taking down barricades and tents at Nathan Road in Mong Kok, according to a post on HKFS’ Facebook page.
Fresh scuffles broke out on Wednesday as Hong Kong authorities moved in to clear the main body of the protest site in Mong Kok, a day after more than 100 demonstrators were arrested. Police wearing helmets and brandishing batons moved in to protect city workers as crowds surged forward to stop them tearing down barricades at the largest part of the Mong Kok site.
Tensions were running high the day after police used pepper spray on pro-democracy protesters at the camp, which has been the scene of some of the most violent clashes since the sit-ins began in on Sep 28. "If we lose here, we won't lose our heart. We can go somewhere else (to occupy). It doesn't need to be here," Kelvin Ng, a 21-year-old protester, told AFP.
Pro-democracy protesters have been camped out on Hong Kong's streets for almost two months to demand fully free elections for the leadership of the southern Chinese city.
116 PEOPLE ARRESTED
Police said in a statement they had arrested 116 people, including a 14-year-old boy, after Tuesday's clashes. Twenty police officers were injured, they added. Police had also arrested a television news crew member who was covering the clearance of the site, the Hong Kong Journalists Association said, condemning the arrest.
Workers wearing "I love HK" T-shirts and red baseball caps initially removed barricades blocking the road at the adjacent larger site on Nathan Road on Wednesday, but protesters remained defiant. "Please obey the injunction, leave immediately," a court bailiff told the crowd before the clearance action. "I won't leave. It's been illegal from day one with or without the court order," said a protester wearing a yellow helmet and a mask who refused to give his name.
The clearance is the third since the high court in the semi-autonomous Chinese city granted injunctions to let authorities start clearing parts of the protest sites.
It comes as public support wanes for the demonstrators, who are protesting against China's restrictions on who will be allowed to stand in the 2017 chief executive election, and as the movement's leaders are split on the next move.
Demonstrators clashed with police in Mongkok last month after they tried to reclaim part of a protest camp which had been cleared out by authorities. Officers used batons and pepper spray against protesters who shielded themselves with umbrellas, but were eventually forced into a partial retreat.
- AFP/CNA/xq/nd