![]() |
| 'Grandpa Wong' is a regular sight at Hong Kong's street battles (AFP Photo/VIVEK PRAKASH) |
Hong Kong (AFP) - "Grandpa Wong" holds a cane above his head as he pleads with riot police to stop firing tear gas -- an 85-year-old shielding protesters on the front lines of Hong Kong's fight for democracy.
Despite his
age, Wong is a regular sight at Hong Kong's street battles, hobbling towards
police lines, placing himself in between riot officers and hardcore protesters,
hoping to de-escalate what have now become near daily clashes.
"I'd
rather they kill the elderly than hit the youngsters," he told AFP during
a recent series of skirmishes in the shopping district of Causeway Bay, a gas
mask dangling from his chin.
"We're
old now, but the children are the future of Hong Kong."
The three
months of huge, sometimes violent pro-democracy protests in the semi-autonomous
Chinese city are overwhelmingly youth-led.
Research by
academics has shown that half of those on the streets are between 20 and 30
years old, while 77 percent have degrees.
But the
movement maintains widespread support across the public with lawyers, doctors,
nurses, teachers and civil servants all holding recent solidarity rallies, even
as the violence escalates.
![]() |
Research by
academics has shown that half of those protesting on Hong Kong's
streets are
between 20 and 30 years old but elderly people have also
marched (AFP
Photo/VIVEK PRAKASH)
|
Groups of
elderly people -- dubbed "silver hairs" -- have also marched.
But Wong
and his friend "Grandpa Chan", a comparatively spry 73-year-old, are
among the most pro-active of this older generation.
The two are
part of a group called "Protect the Children", made up of mostly
senior citizens and volunteers.
Almost
every weekend, they come out to try to mediate between police and
demonstrators, as well as buy protesters time when the cops start to charge.
'Stay
peaceful'
As another
volley of tear gas bounded down a boulevard in Causeway Bay -- a street lined
with luxury malls and fashion retailers -- Chan gripped Wong's hand tightly,
stopping his old comrade from rushing back into the crossfire.
"If we
die, we die together," yelled Chan, who eschews helmets and instead always
wears an eye-catching red hat daubed with slogans.
While
"Protect the Children" turn up primarily to defend the youth, Wong
said he tries to warn protesters not to provoke police.
![]() |
Almost
every weekend, groups of elderly people come out to try to mediate
between
police and demonstrators (AFP Photo/VIVEK PRAKASH)
|
"It's
wrong to throw stones, that's why the police beat them up," he lamented.
"I hope that police won't hit them and the children won't throw stuff
back."
"Everyone
should stay peaceful to protect the core values of Hong Kong."
As Hong
Kong's summer of rage has worn on the violence on both sides has only
escalated.
Each
weekend has brought increasingly violent bouts, with a minority of black-clad
protesters using molotovs, slingshots and bricks.
Police have
also upped their violence, deploying water cannons and resorting to tear gas
and rubber bullets with renewed ferocity.
More than
1,100 people have been arrested, ranging from children as young as 12 to a man
in his mid-seventies. Many are facing charges of rioting which carry ten years
in jail.
Fears have
risen for the fate for one veteran protester Alexandra Wong -- known as
"Grandma Wong" -- who attended dozens of protests waving a large
British flag.
She lives in Shenzhen, a city across the border on the Chinese mainland but has not been seen at the protests since mid-August when she appeared in videos looking injured after clashes with police inside a subway station.
![]() |
While
'Protect the Children' turn up primarily to defend Hong Kong's youth,
Grandpa
Wong also tries to warn protesters not to provoke police (AFP Photo/
VIVEK
PRAKASH)
|
She lives in Shenzhen, a city across the border on the Chinese mainland but has not been seen at the protests since mid-August when she appeared in videos looking injured after clashes with police inside a subway station.
'Let the
elderly look after you'
Grandpa
Wong says he understands why youngsters feel they have no choice but to
protest.
He has
watched over the decades as mainland China has grown more wealthy and powerful
whilst remaining avowedly authoritarian.
"If
the Chinese Communist Party comes to Hong Kong, Hong Kong will become
Guangzhou," Wong sighed, referring to a nearby mainland city.
"The
authorities can lock you up whenever they want."
Hong Kong's
protests were sparked by a controversial bill that would allow extraditions to
China, raising concerns over unfair trials given the mainland's record of
rights abuses.
But it soon
morphed into a wider movement calling for democratic reform and police
accountability.
![]() |
'Let the
elderly look after you,' Grandpa Wong tells protesters in Hong Kong
(AFP
Photo/VIVEK PRAKASH)
|
Roy Chan,
who organises the "Protect the Children" group, says he respects what
the elderly citizens do but is disappointed they feel they need to come out.
"They
should have a good life at home during the last years of their lives," he
says. "But they are in a war and protecting the youth."
Grandpa
Wong's presence at the Causeway Bay protest came to an end as riot police
eventually cleared the usually bustling shopping district.
But the
next day he was right back at it -- this time at a protest near the city's
airport.
"Go
home kiddos," he hollered, brimming with renewed energy. "Let the
elderly look after you."





No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.