pressure on the authorities to stop using inappropriate crowd control tactics around metro stations.
Other cleaners said it shouldn’t be up to them to “decontaminate” the facilities, and that industrial cleaning
equipment was required. Similar scenes were also seen last Friday at the Kwai Fong MTR station, where
volunteers said the station had not been thoroughly cleaned following another teargas volley.
The protest movement is fighting to retain public support after 11 weeks of increasingly violent clashes with
the authorities have divided opinions on demonstrators’ tactics. What started out as a series of marches
against a controversial new extradition bill has spiralled into a broad-based movement against what many
see as the erosion of Hong Kong’s autonomy.
And while police have been accused of using excessive force, the growing unrest has seen Beijing describe
the protesters as “terrorist-like” and threaten to intervene directly if the situation is not brought under
control.
If a rally on Sunday was anything to go by, the protest movement still retains remarkably widespread
support. Despite heavy rain, organisers estimated 1.7 million people turned out in a peaceful march that was
mostly limited by the authorities to the city’s Victoria Park. Police confirmed the rally was mostly peaceful,
with demonstrators dispersing on time in a break from other recent protests that were followed by violent
clashes into the night.
Some incidents of breaches of the public peace did occur late on Sunday, police said, but these were limited
to protesters throwing small stones at a government office and aiming laser beams at police officers. There
was a minimal police presence on Sunday and no arrests were made to add to the more than 700 people
detained since the crisis began in June.
The government said in a statement on Sunday night it was important to restore social order as soon as
possible and that it would begin talks with the public and “rebuild social harmony when everything has
calmed down”. Meanwhile, China kept up its hardened stance on the unrest, which has seen thousands of
paramilitary personnel engaged in menacing “riot control” training exercises just across the border from
Hong Kong in Shenzhen.
The Chinese Communist Party’s official People’s Daily newspaper warned again in an editorial
yesterday that hostile foreign influences were inciting the protest movement. It also said the protests
carried the distinctive features of a “colour revolution”, a reference to popular uprisings in former Soviet
states, such as Ukraine, that often swept long-established rulers from power.
And Beijing lashed out against the government of Taiwan, a self-ruled island that China considers its own
territory, which offered last month to give political asylum to participants in Hong Kong’s protest
movement.
Ma Xiaoguang, spokesman for the Chinese Cabinet’s Taiwan Affairs Office, said Taiwan’s offer would
“cover up the crimes of a small group of violent militants” and encourage their “audacity in harming Hong
Kong and turn Taiwan into a “heaven for ducking the law”. Ma demanded that Taiwan’s government “cease
undermining the rule of law” in Hong Kong, cease interfering in its affairs and not “condone criminals”.
More protests are planned this week in Hong Kong, including another strike in districts across the city.