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Police shoot Hong Kong protester as China celebrates 70th birthday
By Jerome TAYLOR, with Laurent THOMET in Beijing
Hong Kong (AFP) Oct 1, 2019

Hong Kong: nearly four months of rallies, clashes
Hong Kong (AFP) Oct 1, 2019 - Hong Kong's pro-democracy protests erupted into violence in June, plunging the former British colony into its most severe crisis since it reverted to Chinese rule in 1997.

After more intense protests on Tuesday, the 70th anniversary of communist China's founding, here is a recap.

- First clashes -

In the semi-autonomous territory's biggest demonstration since 1997, more than a million people, according to organisers, march on June 9 to protest a draft government bill that would allow extradition to mainland China.

Violence erupts when pockets of protesters fight running battles with police.

A new demonstration on June 12 sees the worst clashes since the handover.

Police use tear gas, rubber bullets and batons against demonstrators. Dozens are injured and one protester dies falling from a roof.

- Two million protesters -

Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam suspends work on the bill on June 15 but a demonstration the next day calls for its full withdrawal.

Organisers say two million people take part in a city of 7.3 million.

On July 1, the anniversary of Hong Kong's return to China, hundreds of protesters smash their way into parliament and ransack the building.

- Authorities get tough -

On July 21, masked, stick-wielding government supporters -- suspected to be triad gangsters -- beat protesters in a train station.

July 27 and 28 see running battles between riot police and protesters.

The local authorities and Beijing toughen their stance and dozens are arrested.

On August 5 a strike brings the city to a standstill. For a third night, police confront protesters.

- Airport chaos -

Hong Kong's airport cancels flights on August 12 after being invaded by thousands of black-clad protesters.

On August 15 thousands of Chinese military personnel parade in Shenzhen, just across the border.

- First gunshot -

On August 25 police for the first time use water cannon and fire a warning shot after clashes in which protesters throw bricks and Molotov cocktails.

Several prominent democracy activists are arrested on August 30.

- Law shelved -

On September 4 Lam says the extradition bill is withdrawn. But the move is dismissed by activists whose campaign has broadened to demand greater democratic freedoms, police accountability and amnesty for the more than 1,000 arrested activists.

- Going abroad -

On September 8, activists march to the US consulate.

Leading activist Joshua Wong goes to Germany to rally support -- prompting an angry reaction from China -- and then to the United States.

On September 15, tens of thousands of people defy authorities for an unsanctioned rally. At Britain's consulate, they demand London's protection and that it ramp up pressure on Beijing.

- Violence intensifies -

On September 22, protesters rally inside a mall with some activists vandalising a subway station and defacing a Chinese flag.

Hong Kong's leader faces more than two hours of anger during a meeting with 150 of her critics for the first time on September 26.

September 29 sees the most intense confrontations in weeks. Police use tear gas, rubber bullets and water cannon against protesters hurling rocks and petrol bombs.

- Protester shot -

On October 1, police for the first time shoot a pro-democracy protester, leaving him wounded, during Hong Kong's worst unrest of the year. Tens of thousands of people defy police orders to disperse and running battles rage for hours across multiple locations.

Britain says the use of live ammunition is "disproportionate".

The new violence comes hours after China celebrated 70 years of Communist Party rule with a massive military parade.

Hong Kong police shot and wounded a pro-democracy protester on Tuesday during the city's worst unrest of the year, hours after China celebrated 70 years of Communist Party rule with a massive military parade.

It was the first such shooting in nearly four months of increasingly violent protests and threatened to strip the spotlight from China's carefully choreographed birthday party, designed to underscore its status as a global superpower.

While President Xi Jinping took salutes from about 15,000 troops in the capital, pro-democracy protesters in semi-autonomous Hong Kong threw eggs at his portrait, with tens of thousands of people defying police orders to disperse.

Protesters say Hong Kong's freedoms are being eroded by Beijing.

Running battles raged for hours across multiple locations. Some hardcore protesters hurled rocks and petrol bombs, while police responded for the most part with tear gas, rubber bullets and water cannon.

In Tsuen Wan district, a police officer fired his weapon at close range into a young man after his unit was attacked by protesters armed with poles and umbrellas, videos filmed by student reporters showed.

Police said the officer feared for his life when he shot, hitting an 18-year-old man whose condition was unknown.

The wounded protester received first aid from officers before paramedics arrived and took him to hospital, police added.

Police said they arrested more than 180 people and officers fired six gunshots in total.

Medical authorities said 66 people were admitted to hospital, two in a critical condition.

Hong Kong is seething with anger over Beijing's rule and many of the fights were especially fierce, even by the standards of this summer's violence which has raged for 17 consecutive weeks.

In one clash several police and reporters were wounded by corrosive liquid thrown by protesters.

Burning barricades sent a pall of black smoke over the city, a regional hub for some of the world's biggest banks.

- Military might -

Former colonial ruler Britain, which handed Hong Kong back to China in 1997, decried the use of live ammunition as "disproportionate". Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab said that "it only risks inflaming the situation".

The violence cast a shadow over the lavish parade in Beijing where tanks, new nuclear missiles and a supersonic drone paraded. Xi and other top officials -- including Hong Kong chief executive Carrie Lam -- watched from a rostrum overlooking Tiananmen Square.

The event was meant to showcase China's journey from a poor nation broken by war to the world's second largest economy.

Xi, who wore the distinctive "Mao suit", delivered a speech invoking the "Chinese dream" of national rejuvenation -- his grand vision of restoring the country to perceived past glory.

"There is no force that can shake the foundation of this great nation," Xi said from the Tiananmen rostrum where Chairman Mao Zedong proclaimed the People's Republic of China on October 1, 1949.

Helicopters flew in a "70" formation as troops goosestepped across Tiananmen Square in what state media described as the country's biggest military parade, featuring 580 pieces of armament and 160 aircraft.

The People's Liberation Army brought out its newest hardware, including a nuclear-capable intercontinental ballistic missile with range enough to reach the entire United States, and a launcher for a hypersonic glider.

Warplanes including the J-20 stealth fighter soared through the smog-choked skies, and state media said a high-altitude, high-speed reconnaissance drone made a public appearance for the first time.

"The party hopes that this occasion will add to its legitimacy and rally support at a time of internal and external challenges," Adam Ni, a China researcher at Macquarie University in Sydney, told AFP.

But the unrest in Hong Kong also illustrated the challenges faced by China, which is also contending with US trade war negotiations.

Despite increasing violence there is still widespread public support for a movement that presents the most serious threat to Beijing's rule since the handover.

In his speech, Xi said China "must adhere" to the one country, two systems policy governing Hong Kong and "maintain the long-term prosperity and stability" of the city.

- Mao portrait -

The Beijing festivities continued with a pageant involving 100,000 civilians and 70 floats depicting China's greatest achievements.

A giant portrait of Mao, followed by those of past leaders and Xi, streamed across the avenue as the president and other officials waved.

Replicas of a space rocket, a homegrown passenger plane and high-speed trains were followed by smiling ethnic minorities -- imagery that glosses over accusations of human rights abuses in the frontier regions of Tibet and Xinjiang.

The Communist Party has repeatedly defied the odds to remain in power for seven decades.

Under Mao, tens of millions of people died during the disastrous Great Leap Forward, and the country was plunged into violent chaos during the decade-long Cultural Revolution.

After Mao's death in 1976, the party launched the reform and opening-up policy under paramount leader Deng Xiaoping, starting decades of breakneck growth and development.

But the party retained a stranglehold on power, sending troops to end the biggest challenge to its rule in 1989 when pro-democracy protesters occupied Tiananmen Square.

bur-jta/ecl/it

MACQUARIE GROUP


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SINO DAILY
Strife-torn Hong Kong braces for China anniversary violence
Hong Kong (AFP) Sept 30, 2019
Ripped-up paving stones lay scattered around the graffiti-scarred streets of Hong Kong after one of the most violent days in a summer of rage, as protesters ready for fresh clashes on Tuesday's 70th anniversary of communist China's founding. The protest-wracked financial hub witnessed its fiercest political violence in weeks Sunday as riot police spent hours in running battles with protesters, the streets blanketed in tear gas and smoke from burning barricades. Millions have hit the streets duri ... read more

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