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Hong Kong police pepper-spray protesters in anti-mainland march

ControlFreak

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Hong Kong police pepper-spray protesters in anti-mainland march

AFP
March 2, 2015, 3:38 am

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Hong Kong (AFP) - Hong Kong police arrested 33 people and fired pepper spray during clashes with demonstrators that disrupted traffic Sunday, as a protest at the rising number of visitors from mainland China turned violent.

Local residents are becoming increasingly angry at border-crossing Chinese traders, whom they say have disrupted their daily lives and clogged public transport.

The so-called parallel traders typically travel to Hong Kong by train and stock up on everything from iPads to milk powder, taking advantage of the lower prices, wider choice and better quality of goods in the city while dodging hefty tariffs on their return.

Scuffles broke out between rival groups as demonstrators marched through the main shopping area in Yuen Long, a neighbourhood close to the Chinese border, prompting police to intervene to break up the fighting.

Some protesters leaving the scene spilled over onto nearby roads, disrupting traffic and local businesses, according to police.

"Police took resolute actions by using the minimum level of force, including using pepper spray and batons, to stop the unlawful violent acts and arrest the protesters involved," city police said in a statement.

"Police arrested 31 men and two women, aged between 13 and 74," the statement said, adding that charges ranged from possession of offensive weapons to assaulting officers and public order offences.

Hong Kong reverted to Chinese control from Britain in 1997 but is semi-autonomous, retaining border controls and a separate administration.

Anti-mainland groups called for traders to return to China, while their opponents shouted "Go back home!" to the demonstrators in the latest protest against Chinese visitors in Hong Kong's northern New Territories.

One officer was surrounded by a group of protesters who hit him in the face, said an AFP photographer at the scene. It was not clear to which group the attackers belonged.

The police statement said five officers were injured during the incident.

Earlier this week Hong Kong's leader said the government was considering restricting the number of Chinese tourists entering the city, following the public backlash.

The announcement came after a leading travel body said the number of mainland visitors over the Lunar New Year fell for the first time in almost 20 years -- attributing the trend to the frosty reception they receive.


 

ControlFreak

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Hong Kong protest sees arrests, but triads stay away


Police use pepper spray amid chaotic scenes as protest against traders continues into the night

PUBLISHED : Sunday, 01 March, 2015, 5:28pm
UPDATED : Monday, 02 March, 2015, 5:11am

Samuel Chan and Emily Tsang

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Police face off with protesters during yesterday's rally in Yuen Long, the latest in a series of protests aimed at traders from the mainland. Photo: Felix Wong

Chaotic scenes hit the narrow streets of Yuen Long yesterday as the clashes marred the latest protest against mainland traders - but police fears of a violent counter-protest involving triads proved unfounded.

Police used pepper spray to break up clashes as the 200 or so protesters and opponents exchanged foul-mouthed insults as they marched from Long Ping MTR station to Sau Fu Street, where a cluster of shops serve mainland buyers.

The march was the third in a month targeting so-called parallel traders, who buy goods in Hong Kong to sell across the border. Demonstrations in Tuen Mun and Sha Tin last month turned ugly, and police sources told the Post last week that they had warned rural strongmen against calling in triad henchmen to confront marchers.

Disputes yesterday occasionally escalated, and police moved in with pepper spray. Several reporters were also sprayed, while one photographer received a wound to his chest.

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About 30 protesters in their early 20s are armour-clad and dressed in blue jackets. Photo: David Wong

Police arrested 33 people, aged 13 to 74, for offences including possession of weapons, common assault and assaulting police. Further arrests could follow, the force said.

Five officers received treatment in hospital for minor limb injuries.

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A few protesters were seen being taken away by police on site. Photo: David Wong

The protesters, most in their 20s and 30s, chanted, "Go home and buy mainland products!" while opponents cried, "No one welcomes you guys, go home!"

Residents appeared divided. Some sympathised with the protesters, who say parallel traders overcrowd towns and edge out stores that serve locals. Others felt the traders brought economic benefits while the protesters were the ones causing disruption.

"Many of those rural gentry are landlords of those shops [that target mainlanders]," said one woman, a law student, referring to rural leaders who led opposition to the protest.

But the owner of a hair salon said he had to close his doors, adding: "Protests like this will only make things worse."

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A woman closes her shop in Yuen Long because of the protest. Photo: EPA

About 30 protesters from Hong Kong Indigenous - formed by people involved in last year's Occupy pro-democracy movement and which joined last month's protests - wore armour under their jackets.

"This [armour] is purely for self-defence. We'll separate the conflicting parties should anything happen," said spokesman Ray Wong Toi-Yeung, 22.

Wong asked protesters to disperse at about 4pm and not crowd the town's main road. Some, however, took that as a signal to do the opposite. Traffic was briefly disrupted on Castle Peak Road, and groups of protesters were still in the town at 10pm.

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Members of HK Indigenous and Civic Passion clash with police. Photo: David Wong

Security chief Lai Tung-kwok yesterday said police would act "resolutely" should anyone break the law during the march.

Leung Che-cheung, a lawmaker and chairman of Yuen Long district council, said about 30 shops had been forced to close. Wong Tat-kwong, president of a local chamber of commerce, said its 1,000 members could sue over their losses.

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Members of the Civic Passion group at the anti-parallel trading protest in the Yuen Long. Photo: AFP

Meanwhile, state media was apparently trying to cool antagonism, while an article credited to Zhang Dinghuai, director of the semi-official Chinese Association of Hong Kong and Macau Studies, advised against hostile rhetoric on both sides "which would harm cross-border relations".


 

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Three arrested at Hong Kong anti-China protest, scuffles with police

Reuters
March 1, 2015, 11:10 pm

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A plainclothes policeman shouts while holding a baton during a confrontation between protesters demonstrating against mainland traders and local residents who feel the protests are disrupting their business, at Yuen Long district near the border with mainland China in Hong Kong March 1, 2015. REUTERS/Bobby Yip

HONG KONG (Reuters) - At least three people were arrested as a group of about 400 people in Hong Kong clashed with police in the latest sign of ongoing tensions caused by China's influence in the city.

Protesters in Yuen Long, in Hong Kong's New Territories just a stone's throw from mainland China, chanted to "cancel the multiple-entry permit" and "topple the Chinese Communist Party" as they complained against so-called parallel traders, who buy goods in Hong Kong to sell at a profit across the border.

Demonstrators blocked the area's main street with garbage bins, halting traffic. Police used pepper spray and restrained some people. A female protester was bleeding from the nose as police dragged her away.

The demonstration mirrored others in recent weeks targeting mainland Chinese visitors that have tapped a seam of resentment against China, resulting in calls for greater Hong Kong nationalism and even independence from China, nearly three months after police cleared away the last of pro-democracy street protests in the city.

"We can't walk, because all their goods pile up like mountains on the streets," said King Lee, a 23-year-old local resident who was protesting the parallel traders. "We should not endure this silently."

Still, the Sunday protests also fanned discontent from some residents unhappy with the disruption to their daily routine.

"Why are there so many mainlanders shopping in Hong Kong? It's because our products are good," said Tom Lau, a 50-year-old local resident who works in a kitchen. Lau jeered at protesters.

"Why oppose them (the shoppers)? They are just protesting for the sake of protesting. They are just stirring up trouble. They march with the colonial flag, but we are Chinese people."

(Reporting by Venus Wu and Bobby Yip; Additional reporting by Pak Yiu; Writing by Elzio Barreto; Editing by Raissa Kasolowsky)

 

Reddog

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Funny how HK people are unhappy that mainland Chinese give them business by buying from them. Why don't they just refuse to sell if they are unhappy ? Silly HK people.
 

babuSingh

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To the shop owners of course more business is good why dont sell? But from a consumer viewpoint, the mainlanders flocking to HK poses social problems as imagine they are competing with you daily for consumables, transport and resources where HK is already one of the busiest country around.

Try putting yourself in their shoes before you think everything can be solved easily

Btw this has been going on for years for your info...
 
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