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| The footage showed squads of police facing down 'protesters' dressed in construction hats and facemasks -- reminiscent of demonstrators in Hong Kong (AFP Photo/STR) |
Beijing (AFP) - Thousands of Chinese riot police have staged a drill just across the border from Hong Kong, in what appeared to be a thinly veiled warning from Beijing about its ability to end two months of protests in the global financial hub.
The
exercise, which took place Tuesday in Shenzhen -- a city in southern China that
borders the semi-autonomous city -- instantly attracted online attention given
the close resemblance between the drill and the ongoing clashes in adjacent
Hong Kong.
The footage
showed squads of police facing down "protesters" dressed in
construction hats and facemasks -- reminiscent of demonstrators in Hong Kong.
As the
crowd attacked police with long, wooden poles, officers pushed back with riot
shields and deployed tear gas.
"All
police forces in Shenzhen are always ready!" Shenzhen police wrote in an
online post about Tuesday's drills, which it said involved 12,000 police
officers.
It is the
second video in less than a week where Chinese security forces are shown cracking
down on protesters -- fuelling speculation about a possible intervention by the
military or mainland police in Hong Kong.
Last week
China's military, the People's Liberation Army (PLA), released a slick
propaganda video showing a drill of armed troops quelling a protest in Hong
Kong.
And though
Shenzhen police said the anti-riot drills were organised as public security
measures ahead of the 70th anniversary celebrations in October of the People's
Republic of China, that hasn't stopped netizens from commenting on the
similarities with Hong Kong.
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The
exercise instantly attracted online attention given the close resemblance
between
the drill and the ongoing clashes in Hong Kong (AFP Photo/STR)
|
"Right
now, [Chinese President] Xi’s top priority is to keep the Hong Kong situation
under control so the October 1st celebrations won’t be affected," said
political analyst Willy Lam.
PLA
garrison
Hong Kong
has been plunged into its worst crisis in recent history after millions of
demonstrators took to the streets -- and sporadic violent confrontations
between police and pockets of hardcore protesters.
The
demonstrations were triggered by a controversial bill which would have allowed
extraditions to mainland China but have evolved into a call for wider
democratic reforms.
On Tuesday,
China's central government issued its harshest warning yet to Hong Kong
protesters, and said "those who play with fire will perish by it."
The PLA has
maintained a garrison in Hong Kong since the former British colony was returned
to China in 1997, but its troops generally keep a low profile and are rarely
seen in uniform in public.
According
to Hong Kong's Basic Law, troops from mainland China can operate in the city if
local authorities request it.
Hong Kong
authorities may, "when necessary", ask the central government for
assistance from the garrison "in the maintenance of public order and in
disaster relief", according to Article 14.
Mainland
police are not allowed to operate in the semi-autonomous city.
But Article
18 of that document allows the central government to effectively suspend Hong
Kong's laws if there is a "state of war" or "turmoil" which
"endangers national security or unity".


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