Hong Kong protests: Violent clashes and tear gas at Chinese University on Tuesday

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South China Morning Post
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Anti-government demonstrations took place at various locations around the city and transportation was disrupted for the second day in a row

South China Morning Post |
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A fire rages on a sports field at the campus of Chinese University.

Police and protesters engaged in fiery battles outside university campuses and blocked roads at many locations on Tuesday, for a second straight day of protests meant to disable the government. 

At Chinese University, the site of the most violent clashes with many petrol bombs thrown and tear gas deployed, water cannons arrived at 10pm, spraying blue dye at protesters. Earlier, a truce was proposed after senior university officials intervened, but the fighting continued after a brief interlude.

A wrap-up of Monday's protest events, including tear gas in Central

University president Rocky Tuan Sung-chi visited the area – littered with bricks and burnt barricades – in the evening to mediate between police and protesters. He ended up being hit by tear gas as his entourage was leaving for a police station to meet students who had been arrested earlier.

Former university chief Joseph Sung Jao-yiu also showed up later in the evening, to address students and protesters and plead with them to disengage. “Tonight I hope everyone can leave peacefully. I hope there won’t be any more tear gas or confrontation,” he said, before departing.

Most of the protesters were unmoved, still guarding their positions. By midnight, police had retreated from their earlier front lines.

Police said in a statement that a water cannon was deployed at the campus because protesters threw projectiles at officers while they retreated from the campus under a “consensus” reached with university management to defuse the situation.

“As police officers were retreating, rioters threw bricks, petrol bombs, launched arrows and even fired a signal flare at police officers. Such violence has reached a deadly level, posing a serious threat to police officers and everyone at the scene,” the statement read.

Student shot and man set on fire in one of the most violent days of unrest

Earlier, after more than 12 hours of exchanging fire and fury, protesters sent out messages on encrypted and open social media channels asking for other students to leave their universities to converge at the campus in Sha Tin to help them defend the site, and for other well-wishers to send supplies.

Supporters showed up at several drop-off locations with supplies of cup noodles, canned and dried food, eye masks and body wash, revealing the depth of support the protesters enjoyed despite the continuing violence of the past months.

The main battleground at CUHK was around Bridge No 2, near Campus Circuit, overlooking the Tolo Highway, a main road in the New Territories. From the bridge, a long-running stand-off with riot police played out as some protesters threw petrol bombs, bricks and other objects and the force fired back with tear gas, rubber bullets and beanbag rounds.

At another corner of the university, a huge fire was lit in the late morning after a car, already vandalised, was set ablaze. Everywhere they went on the campus perimeter, protesters carried their black banners bearing the battle cry “Liberate Hong Kong; Revolution of Our Times”.

At one point during the night, the SCMP observed protesters throwing petrol bombs almost every minute behind their umbrella shields, as return shots of tear gas and rubber bullets punctuated the air and clouds of smoke blanketed the area.

Across the city, there were other scenes of destruction similar to Monday’s violence – one of the worst days during a political crisis now in its sixth month – as a clearly overwhelmed police force accused protesters of bringing the city to the “brink of a total breakdown”.

Clashes break out between riot police and students protesting as they exchange tear gas and petrol bombs at the Chinese University of Hong Kong in Sha Tin.
Photo: SCMP / Sam Tsang

In the evening, at Festival Walk mall in Kowloon Tong, next door to City University, protesters broke in, smashing glass panes and setting fire to a large Christmas tree in the atrium.

In Mong Kok, once again a favourite night-time location for protesters to take on police, water cannons were deployed and multiple rounds of tear gas fired, as shops shuttered early.

The Hospital Authority said that, as of midnight, 51 people had been sent to hospital with protest-related injuries. Among them, one man was in serious condition at Prince of Wales Hospital. Thirty-one of them were stable, 16 had been discharged and three were still waiting to be seen.

Student shot remains in serious condition as arguments rage over use of police force

Eight publicly funded universities, plus the Open University, Hang Seng University, Shue Yan University and the Vocational Training Council, said they would continue to suspend classes and exams on Wednesday.

Throughout Tuesday, public buses and MTR train services were severely disrupted. At least 10 train stations were closed, while a train on the East Rail line had to stop after it hit a bike and other objects thrown onto the tracks.

Passengers, including a pregnant woman, a disabled man and an elderly woman with a breathing aid, had to walk the last 100 metres (330 feet) of the track to get to the station. No one was injured in the incident.

Ying Wa student arrested for playing "Glory to Hong Kong" on campus

At a news briefing in the morning, before a meeting with her Executive Council, the city’s embattled leader Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor said it was “extremely selfish” for demonstrators to aim at paralysing Hong Kong.

She insisted that the government would not announce the suspension of school classes, even though some schools had decided not to hold them on Tuesday.

“Internet users wanted to create the effect that Hong Kong has stopped running. If the government is stopping our daily activities, we would be falling into their trap,” she said.

Lam said the government would do its best to make sure district council elections are held as scheduled on November 24, after a group of 125 people, including former officials, issued a joint statement calling for the reassurance.

Police condemned the arson and vandalism across the city.

Riot police officer lives double life as protester

“Society is on the brink of a total breakdown, and the mobs have seriously and extensively affected the lives of citizens,” Senior Superintendent Kong Wing-cheung said at a news briefing.

In a statement, the State Council’s Hong Kong and Macau Affairs Office expressed “the strongest condemnation of the rioters, and demands the suspects be arrested and be brought to justice as soon as possible”.

Spokesman Yang Guang said violence should not be tolerated and expressed support for the Hong Kong government, police force and judiciary to take “stronger, more resolute and more efficient” measures to restore order.

But in Central, as elsewhere, there were many scenes of ordinary Hongkongers supporting the protesters. In the city’s business district, masked protesters showed up at lunchtime for the second day, blocking traffic on major roads including Des Voeux Road Central.

Anti-government protesters hold a lunchtime rally for a second day in Central.
Photo: SCMP / K. Y. Cheng

They damaged traffic lights, while one spray-painted the windscreen of a double-decker bus. Many protesters wore smart office clothes.

Protests began shortly after 7am, part of a three-day campaign which started on Monday. At City University’s student residence in Kowloon Tong, they set up barricades and began throwing bricks at police.

A 22-year-old university student who lives in the halls said she woke up “outraged” after finding out tear gas was fired near her campus, so she went to “defend” it by setting up roadblocks.

The police force had been targeting university students, she said. “[Police] just hate students and they go to different campuses without any reasonable reasons,” she added.

Riot police conduct a dispersal operation and make arrests as anti-government protesters hold a lunchtime rally for a second day in Central.
Photo: SCMP / K. Y. Cheng

As that was playing out, protesters began gathering outside Chinese University. They moved sports equipment, such as arrows and javelins, to a roadblock outside the university gym, and engaged in a stand-off with police.

Senior Superintendent Kong Wing-cheung later said police had full legal power to enter the campus. They did so after 30 petrol bombs had been hurled against officers in 20 minutes, he added.

Earlier, dozens of protesters had gathered at Polytechnic University in Hung Hom and at the University of Hong Kong in Pok Fu Lam. At PolyU, they threw rubbish bins and debris onto Chatham Road South from a footbridge. Police later closed in and arrested at least two women.

At HKU, about 20 protesters blocked Pok Fu Lam Road near the MTR station by throwing chairs and other items from a footbridge. One man was injured as he was hit by a falling chair.

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