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Hong Kong protests: police fire teargas as thousands rally against Beijing’s national security law

  • Armoured vehicles and water cannon deployed earlier to tackle protests amid China plans to force through security laws

Hong Kong police have used teargas, pepper spray and water cannon on crowds after thousands took to the streets in protest against Beijing’s declaration that it intends to impose national security laws on the semi-autonomous region.

At least 180 people were arrested on Sunday for illegal assembly and misconduct in public places, according to police.

Protesters defied social distancing laws to attend an unauthorised rally and march in downtown Hong Kong, one of the biggest gatherings since the pandemic began. In contrast to marches and rallies last year, demonstrators were visibly tense in anticipation of a harsh police crackdown.

Large crowds had begun peacefully marching up Hennessy Road when police fired multiple rounds of teargas within 30 minutes of the protest’s official start time.

Shops and buildings quickly shut their doors, and people ran into side streets and pedestrian overpasses before soon returning to Hong Kong’s busiest arterial main road. Groups built makeshift barricades as police chased people through streets, making arrests and rounding up others to search them.

Police, who were controversially cleared earlier this month by the police watchdog of accusations of brutality, repeatedly deployed tear gas, pepper spray, and water cannon. As night fell, groups of protesters and riot police continued to face off as police tried to clear the remaining demonstrators.

The rally, which was planned last week in relation to another controversial law that would criminalise ridicule of the Chinese national anthem, took on fresh urgency after Beijing revealed its plans last week to force a sweeping anti-sedition law on Hong Kong.

One 30-year-old protester, who gave her name as Ms Chan, told the Guardian: “Even if there’s a risk of being arrested, I’d still come out, I’ll fight till my last breath.”

A protester who gave his name as Mr Hui, 75, said he was there “to protect my home”. “I witnessed several decades of the Chinese Communist party’s misdeeds, I escaped to Hong Kong [from mainland China] 40 years ago,” he said.

“Now they have completely ruined Hong Kong. I am here to protect my home. We’re the real patriots, not the Communist party.”

The announcement by China appears to have increased anti-Beijing sentiment in Hong Kong and prompted calls from the protesters for Hong Kong’s complete independence – something absent from their demands so far. Despite accusations by Hong Kong and Chinese authorities of separatism, the pro-democracy movement officially has just five core demands, none of which are independence.

Crowds chanted “Hong Kong independence, only way” while others scrawled the phrase on flyovers. Others chanted the familiar refrain of last year’s protests, “Rejuvenate Hong Kong, revolution of our time” and some sang “Glory to Hong Kong”, an unofficial anthem of the movement.

The announcement that Beijing would impose the national security laws stunned Hong Kong’s residents, millions of whom marched through the city over the past year to protest against another hated bill, now shelved, that would have allowed extradition to the mainland.

The Hong Kong government has relaxed many Covid restrictions but maintained limits on public gatherings, prompting accusations this was a tactic to prevent protests.

Ahead of the event, riot police, armoured vehicles and water cannon were deployed across Hong Kong island including at Beijing’s Liaison Office. Police had warned people not to march, promising to take “resolute law enforcement action as appropriate”.

The march and rally were largely peaceful, with some protesters raising face masks in front of police to say they were attending a health forum and thus not breaching laws.

According to the government, demonstrators vandalised and damaged shops, traffic lights, roads and other public facilities and threw bricks at police. Some protesters were seen hurling plastic bottles, umbrellas, and small branches ripped from nearby trees at officers. Photos showed smashed shop windows.

Later in the afternoon, footage showed protesters using a crowbar to attack a man identified as a solicitor who has given support to the government’s controversial anti-mask law. According to local media the man was hospitalised.

“Although the violent and illegal acts subsided amid the epidemic earlier, the rioters have all along been eyeing opportunities to act,” the Hong Kong government said in a statement, calling the demonstrators’ behaviour “outrageous”.

On Sunday, China’s foreign minister, Wang Yi, said the process for enacting a national security law – to be drafted in China and directly entered into Hong Kong law without approval by the local legislature – country’s legislature next week. “We must get it done without the slightest delay,” he said.

The decision, to be approved by Beijing’s National People’s Congress (NPC) would pave the way for a law outlawing acts of subversion, separatism, “acts of foreign interference” and terrorism against the central government, charges that have been used against political dissidents and opponents in mainland China. It would also allow Beijing to install its own security agencies in Hong Kong.

Despite global condemnation, Hong Kong’s leader, Carrie Lam, has given support for the NPC bypassing the Hong Kong government to impose the law itself.

Under the Basic Law – the mini-constitution enacted when Hong Kong was handed to China by Britain in 1997 – Hong Kong is obligated to pass national security laws itself. However successive attempts to pass them have failed in the face of community opposition.

The 1997 agreement handing Hong Kong back from Britain to China promised 50 years of uninterrupted semi-autonomy for Hong Kong under the “one country, two systems” principle. With its announcement Beijing has been accused of trying to bring 2047 forward to 2020.

Mass protests in 2019, which had begun to rekindle as city emerges from pandemic restrictions, have been widely cited by authorities as the catalyst for the increased crackdown.

Since June, more than 8,000 people, including protesters as young as 12 and 15 senior activists and pro-democracy figures, have been arrested over involvement in protests. There is fear that at a minimum, the new laws could be used to increase the charges against them.

The national security laws have been condemned around the world, with the US threatening consequences for mainland China.

“The Hong Kong authorities have clearly learned nothing from 2019 … Attempts to crack down on people’s human rights will not bring stability but provoke more anger and more unrest on the streets,” Amnesty International said in a statement on Sunday.

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