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Hong Kong protests: Homemade bomb targets riot police as violence escalates

'They are crazy,' Hong Kong’s deputy commissioner says of protesters

John Leicester
Monday 14 October 2019 18:12 BST
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'Hair tutorial' video emerges for the latest protest hairstyle in Hong Kong

A homemade, remote-controlled bomb intended to “kill or to harm” riot control officers was detonated as they deployed against renewed violence in Hong Kong over the weekend, police said.

The “loud thud” on Sunday night happened close to riot officers who had been clearing away a protester-built road block.

It marked the first known use of an explosive device during protests that started in June over a contested extradition bill and have snowballed into an anti-government, anti-police and anti-China movement.

“It exploded less than 2m away from a police vehicle. We have reason to believe that the bomb was meant to target police officers,” Hong Kong’s deputy commissioner, Tang Ping-keung, said.

But despite spiralling violence, widespread vandalism and gasoline-bomb attacks by black-clad hardcore protesters and repeated government appeals for people not to take their side, the protest movement is still rousing determined support from more moderate demonstrators, broadly worried about the future of the semi-autonomous Chinese territory and its freedoms.

A peaceful rally in central Hong Kong’s business district on Monday night drew a giant crowd tens of thousands strong: a chanting, singing throng so massive that demonstrators filled side streets and broad boulevards.

Organisers said they drew 130,000 participants.

Many waved US flags. The rally appealed for the US congress to press on with legislation that would require the secretary of state to annually review Hong Kong’s special economic and trade status, providing a check on Beijing’s influence over the territory.

A banner where speakers whipped up the crowd appealed for Donald Trump, the US president to “liberate Hong Kong”. Another read: ”Make Hong Kong great again.”

The majority of demonstrators wore face masks, a practice first adopted by many to protect their identities amid profound distrust of the police and government but now also a symbol of dissent since Hong Kong’s leader, Carrie Lam, made the wearing of masks at rallies punishable by a year in jail.

Widespread defiance of the mask ban and the solid turnout for Monday’s rally suggested that Ms Lam’s government is barely making headway with its efforts to get demonstrators to turn their back on the movement’s more radical and destructive hardcore.

Mr Tang, the deputy commissioner, sought again to swing opinion at his news conference, saying violence against police has reached “a life-threatening level”.

“If members of the public continue to remain silent and condone and tolerate such behaviour they will go from bad to worse,” he said. “Please cut ties with these criminals and rioters.”

Plain-clothed police officer attacked by protesters with petrol bomb in Hong Kong

No casualties were reported from the detonation on Sunday night on a usually busy thoroughfare in Kowloon that was among dozens of protest hotspots.

“There was a loud thud,” Chin-chiu Suryanto, an officer with the police force’s bomb-disposal unit, said.

He held up a photo taken from a police vehicle dash-cam that showed a blurry spot of light, circled in yellow on the picture.

“The intent (was) to kill or to harm the police officers at the scene,” Mr Suryanto said, although he also said the explosion was “not a very strong” one, leaving burn marks.

The “improvised explosive device that was controlled by a mobile phone” was concocted with a “highly effective” explosive and placed in plants, he said.

He likened its use to “terrorist events” seen elsewhere in the world.

Switching tactics, small groups of hardcore protesters wreaked havoc by popping up on Sunday in multiple locations across the city, overwhelming the fanned-out police deployment. Violence stretched into the night.

Police said they arrested 201 people, aged 14 to 62, on Saturday and Sunday. They said 12 officers were injured, one of them slashed in the neck with a sharp object, severing a nerve.

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Mr Tang said two plainclothes officers were beaten bloody by rioters. A black-clad protester was also caught on video dropping a riot officer with a flying kick.

Four men were arrested in those cases, the deputy commissioner said.

Rioters also set a police vehicle aflame with a gasoline bomb and threw more than 20 gas bombs at a police station.

“They are crazy,” Mr Tang said.

Associated Press

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