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| Hong Kong protesters burn items at the Causeway Bay metro station entrance after the government invoked emergency powers to ban demonstrators from wearing face masks (AFP Photo/Nicolas ASFOURI) |
Hong Kong (AFP) - Hong Kong's leader invoked colonial-era emergency powers Friday to ban protesters wearing face masks, but the move aimed at quelling months of unrest sparked immediate rallies, widespread clashes and vows to defy the new law.
Chief
executive Carrie Lam said she made the order under the Emergency Regulations
Ordinances, a sweeping provision that grants her the ability to bypass the
legislature and make any law during a time of emergency or public danger.
It is the
first time the law has been used in 52 years.
"We
believe that the new law will create a deterrent effect against masked violent
protesters and rioters, and will assist the police" in law enforcement,
Lam said.
As soon as
the ban was announced, widespread protests broke out across Hong Kong. Large
crowds of mostly office workers blocked roads in the heart of the commercial
district.
Some
protesters tore down pro-China banners, before clashes erupted throughout the
evening. Police used tear gas in multiple locations to disperse protesters who
had taken over roads, vandalised subway stations, set street fires and trashed
pro-China businesses.
.
.
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High school
students gathered in the heart of Hong Kong's commercial district,
chanting
slogans and wearing posters reading "all people masked" on their
uniforms
(AFP Photo/Philip FONG)
|
In the
northern district of Yuen Long, a police officer opened fire when he was
surrounded in his car and attacked by protesters, a petrol bomb exploding at
his feet.
"A
large crowd of rioters attacked a plainclothes officer. He fell into the
ground, then got beaten by a lot of people. Under this life-threatening
situation, the police officer fired a live round for his safety," police
said in a statement.
The entire
subway network was also suspended, leaving protesters, locals and Friday night
revellers stranded.
Online
forums used by protesters filled with angry comments and vows to hit the
streets over the three-day weekend.
"Youngsters
are risking their lives, they don't mind being jailed for 10 years, so wearing
masks is not a problem," a 34-year-old office worker wearing a surgical
mask, who gave her first name as Mary, told AFP.
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As soon as
the ban was announced, widespread protests
broke out across Hong Kong -- here,
people march in the
Admiralty area (AFP Photo/Nicolas ASFOURI)
|
'Watershed'
Beijing
threw its backing behind the ban, which it described as "extremely
necessary".
"The
current chaos in Hong Kong cannot continue indefinitely," Yang Guang,
spokesman for the Hong Kong and Macao Affairs Office of China's central
government, said in a statement.
"An
important moment has come for stopping the violence with a clearer attitude and
more effective measures," he added.
Critics
said Lam's move was a major step towards authoritarianism for Hong Kong, which
has been governed by China under a "one country, two systems"
framework since British colonial rule ended in 1997.
"This
is a watershed. This is a Rubicon," pro-democracy lawmaker Claudia Mo told
AFP.
"And
I'm worried this could be just a starter. More draconian bans in the name of
law could be lurking around the corner."
Prominent
democracy activist Joshua Wong said the law "marks the beginning of the
end of Hong Kong".
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Hong Kong
riot police march towards protesters in the Wan Chai tourist and
bar district
(AFP Photo/Nicolas ASFOURI)
|
"It is
ironic that a colonial-era weapon is being used by the Hong Kong government and
the Chinese Communist Party," he told AFP.
Pro-Beijing
lawmakers and police associations welcomed the ban.
The last
time the law was invoked was during riots in 1967 -- a period where more than
50 people were killed in a year-long leftist bombing and murder spree.
Tough
penalties
Hong Kong's
protests were ignited by a now-scrapped plan to allow extraditions to the
mainland, which fuelled fears of an erosion of liberties promised under
"one country, two systems".
After
Beijing and local leaders took a hard line, the demonstrations snowballed into
a wider movement calling for more democratic freedoms and police
accountability.
Protesters
have used face masks to avoid identification and respirators to protect
themselves from tear gas.
The ban came after the worst violence of the year on Tuesday, when China celebrated 70 years of Communist Party rule. During clashes, an officer shot and wounded a teenager -- the first such shooting since the demonstrations began.
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A Hong Kong
protester defies the ban with an "Iron Man" mask -- the city's
pro-democracy demonstrators have long used masks to avoid being identified
(AFP
Photo/Mohd RASFAN)
|
The ban came after the worst violence of the year on Tuesday, when China celebrated 70 years of Communist Party rule. During clashes, an officer shot and wounded a teenager -- the first such shooting since the demonstrations began.
The new
law, which Lam said would take effect at midnight, threatens anyone wearing
masks at legal and unsanctioned protests with up to one year in prison.
People can
still wear masks in the street, but must remove them if asked to by police.
Exemptions
are available for religious and medical reasons and for those who need masks to
do their jobs -- such as reporters.
Lam said
she did not rule out further laws under the emergency provisions if the
violence worsened. Even moderate protesters have already shown a willingness to
break the law in large numbers, appearing at unsanctioned rallies in their tens
of thousands.





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