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| The Hong Kong government has repeatedly rejected demands from protesters for a fully independent inquiry into police behaviour during the protests (AFP Photo/DALE DE LA REY) |
An international panel of experts hired to advise Hong Kong on the police response to huge pro-democracy protests announced Wednesday they were quitting, saying the watchdog was not fit for purpose "in a society that values freedoms and rights".
The group's
damning conclusion is a blow to Hong Kong's government, which has insisted its
Independent Police Complaints Commission is capable of holding the force to
account over snowballing claims of brutality.
"We
ultimately concluded that a crucial shortfall was evident in the powers,
capacity and independent investigative capability of IPCC," the experts
said.
Critics
have long charged the body lacks adequate powers, is stacked with
pro-establishment figures and has been toothless when it comes to keeping the police
in line.
The
watchdog can only handle complaints forwarded by the police themselves and it
cannot subpoena documents or compel witnesses to testify.
Such
limitations, the expert panel said, do not "begin to meet the standards
citizens of Hong Kong would likely require of a police watchdog operating in a
society that values freedoms and rights".
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| Police detain protesters after they attempted to escape the campus of the Hong Kong Polytechnic University in November (AFP Photo/ANTHONY WALLACE) |
Protests
have rocked Hong Kong for more than six months, with up to two million people
taking to the streets, initially against a now-shelved extradition bill.
Latterly,
one of the core demands of protesters -- alongside fully free elections -- has
been an inquiry into the police, who have been left to battle increasingly
violent black-clad activists and are now loathed by significant chunks of the
deeply polarised population.
But both
chief executive Carrie Lam and the police have repeatedly rejected those calls.
Pro-democracy
lawmaker Tanya Chan described the resignation of the expert group as a
"vote of no confidence" in the IPCC and the interim report it is
expected to produce next year.
Political
scientist Ma Ngok said the panel's decision confirmed Hong Kong people's doubts
on the IPCC's ability to find the truth.
"The
government's strategy of making the report independent by having a panel of
overseas experts has failed," Ngok told AFP.
Public row
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Police
officers point their guns at protesters in Tseun Wan in Hong Kong
in August
(AFP Photo/Lillian SUWANRUMPHA)
|
Public row
The panel
was announced in September and was chaired by Sir Dennis O'Connor, who was
tasked by the British government to write a report on the police after the 2011
London riots.
It included
current or former police watchdog chiefs from Canada, Australia and New
Zealand, and a British specialist on crowd behaviour.
A month
ago, a leaked statement from the group revealed they felt the police watchdog
was not equipped to carry out a proper investigation, and suggested a fully
independent inquiry would be better suited.
But their
frank assessment was not welcomed by Anthony Neoh, the IPCC's head.
He gave an
interview to a mainland Chinese media outlet rebuking the panel, saying they
"do not understand Hong Kong's situation".
On Sunday,
an estimated 800,000 people marched peacefully through the city's streets in a
movement that has become a popular revolt against Beijing's authoritarian rule.
The last three weeks have seen a rare lull in the violence and vandalism after pro-democracy parties won a landslide in local council elections.
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Police
arrest a protester at the Hong Kong Polytechnic University
in November (AFP
Photo/DALE DE LA REY)
|
The last three weeks have seen a rare lull in the violence and vandalism after pro-democracy parties won a landslide in local council elections.
"Do
not waste time, and please grab this golden opportunity to persuade Beijing...
to support an independent commission of inquiry," lawmaker Chan added.
An end to
violence is something Lam has insisted must be a precursor to meaningful
dialogue.
But she has
shown no sign she is willing to budge, leading to fears clashes could resume.
In her
weekly press conference on Tuesday she dismissed protesters' demands once more
as she announced plans to go to Beijing this weekend where she is expected to
meet with Chinese leader Xi Jinping.
China has
publicly thrown its support behind both Lam and the city's police, even as
their approval ratings take a hammering.




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