War Armed mob seizes Hong Kong train station - Anarchy In The HK

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A mob of masked men armed with batons stormed a train station in the Hong Kong district of Yuen Long on Sunday.

Footage posted on social media showed the men, all in white T-shirts, violently attacking people on platforms and inside train carriages.

At least 36 people were injured in the violence, local media report.

The mob attack followed the latest pro-democracy rally in the centre of Hong Kong, where riot police had fired tear gas and rubber bullets at protesters.

It is unclear who the mob were or what the motives for the attack were.

Skip Twitter post by @hyjpang

Jun Pang@hyjpang

https://twitter.com/hyjpang/status/1153002842145337346

This is a clip from Gwyneth Ho (@StandNewsHK)'s live video. Look at how vehement and vicious the white-shirts are in their attacks on protesters. Look at their matching weapons – their long wooden sticks & umbrellas. #antielab #YuenLong
(https://www.facebook.com/standnewshk/videos/407353793207073/ …)

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In a statement, the government said that in Yuen Long "some people congregated at the platforms of the MTR station and train compartments, attacking commuters".

"This is absolutely unacceptable to Hong Kong as a society that observes the rule of law. The SAR [Special Administrative Region] Government strongly condemns any violence and will seriously take enforcement actions."

Hong Kong Police also said: "Some people attacked commuters at the platforms of the Yuen Long MTR station and train compartments, resulting in multiple injuries."

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Kinling Lo 盧建靈

@kinlinglo

https://twitter.com/kinlinglo/status/1152969285200838657

#HongKong protesters only have one question in mind now: Where was the Police? @hkpoliceforce

Video filmed inside #YuenLong MTR train station.

Men in white tee were reportedly thugs sent by different gangs to go after #HongKongProtest ers.#extraditionbill

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The mob stormed Yuen Long MTR station at about 22:30 local time (14:30 GMT), hours after clashes betrween protestors and police in the Sheung Wan area earlier in the day.

Yuen Long is a more remote district of Hong Kong, and is far away from the site of the main pro-democracy protests.

What happened at the rally earlier on Sunday?
Riot police fired tear gas and rubber bullets at protesters in Hong Kong at a large pro-democracy rally, and charged demonstrators who threw objects at police lines.

The protest route was altered with protesters told to stop at Wan Chai rather than Central, where the key government offices are located.

Some 4,000 police officers were deployed.

Bonnie Leung from the Civil Human Rights Front urged Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam to "stop turning a deaf ear to the Hong Kong people's demands".

Organisers of Sunday's protest say more than 430,000 people took part but police put the figure at 138,000.

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Media captionTear gas fired at Hong Kong pro-democracy protest
Mass protests have been held for weeks, initially over an extradition deal with mainland China but now covering other issues on democracy in Hong Kong.

Late on Sunday, riot police equipped with masks and shields were seen swarming towards protesters close to a ferry terminal on the main island.

Images outside of the liaison office, China's central government building, show signs covered in graffiti. One of the slogans reads: "You taught us peaceful marches are useless."

China's central government liaison office in Hong Kong is covered in graffiti
Image copyrightAFPImage captionProtesters threw eggs at the Liaison office's sign on Sunday
Some protesters also covered the CCTV cameras outside a police station with spray paint.

The latest rally was put on edge after a huge haul of explosives was found along with protest leaflets.

On Saturday, a counter-rally in support of the police and against protest violence drew tens of thousands.

Tear-gas, rubber bullets, the trashing of parliament by protesters and sporadic clashes have created the worst crisis in the territory's recent history.

The Hong Kong government has since suspended trying to pursue the extradition bill.

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Media captionThe BBC's Stephen McDonell was amid the pro-democracy protesters as tear gas began to be fired
The former British colony is part of China but run under a "one country, two systems" arrangement that guarantees it a level of autonomy. It has its own judiciary, and a legal system that is independent from mainland China.

What was Saturday's counter-protest about?
It took place in the central Hong Kong district of Admiralty on Saturday, attracting 103,000 people according to police, but more than 300,000 according to organisers.

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Media caption"You are fake news" - BBC correspondent heckled live on air during Saturday's rally
It was themed "Safeguard Hong Kong". The South China Morning Post said attendees included locals, mainland immigrants, members of ethnic minorities and visitors from across the border.

The rally, which won coverage in Chinese state media, focused on support for the police and condemnation of the violence that has marred pro-democracy rallies.

Views differed, however, on how the Hong Kong government had tackled the crisis.

How did this wave of protests start?
They were sparked by the proposed extradition bill that would have allowed people to be sent to China for trial.

Critics said it would undermine Hong Kong's judicial independence and could be used to target those who spoke out against the Chinese government.

The Hong Kong government suspended the bill, but this has not halted the demonstrations, which now reflect broader demands for democratic reform and concerns that freedoms are being eroded.

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Media captionHong Kong's Chief Executive Carrie Lam has said there is "no plan" to continue with the bill but this has not convinced critics

Actual graffiti said:
You taught us peaceful marches are useless.

Holy fuck, they're serious!
 
Rate me optimistic if you want but I'm hoping some bigger shit happens. The Chinese government has had it too good for too long.
 
For some context, millions of Chinese who don't think they're ruled by the PRC have been protesting an extradition bill since June. Bongs guaranteed the sovereignty of Hong Kong when they sold it back to China, but Xi has been making moves ever since he was elected to eliminate the Western style rights Hong Kong citizens enjoy. It came to a head in when millions protested an extradition bill that would allow the PRC to extradite Chinese citizens to mainland China for crimes against the state.

Shit got so bad that not only didn't the bill pass, but Carrie Lam, the mayor? government head of Hong Kong, tried to resign. Beijing told her "lol no suck it bitch." The PRC was not supposed to be able to rape Hong Kong for 50 under the "one country, two systems" agreed to by all parties before Britain sold Hong Kong to the communists, but Britain has spent their Cold War era defense budget on the dole for muslims and they know they're so useless that they didn't bother trying to cash in non-existent real politik cred to have the US intervene on their behalf.
 
Rate me optimistic if you want but I'm hoping some bigger shit happens. The Chinese government has had it too good for too long.

Same. Everybody's going around sperging about Russia! Russia! Russia! while China was gaining power and their influence has infiltrated even America.
 
it's fucked. lived there for a few years a few years ago. have strong connections. get out.

i said the same about SA and CT is still liveable though so?
 
Let's set them up with a few million M16A1s and enough ammo for each. Then supply them with air support from the third fleet and bring in as much in the way of supplies we can. The war with China is inevitable. May as well kick them when they're down.
 
the causes within hk are fairly well-understood for the overall conflict, but it's not really clear what it will take to end the protesting. one part of the problem is that the goals are so nebulous, but i think carrie lam stepping down would help diffuse things significantly. another part is that the numbers of protesters themselves have dwindled significantly since early june, and so a larger proportion of them are the radical and potentially violent ones who have made headlines lately.

still a massive problem for the emperor that appeared on his watch. in fact, he's started quite a few fires since he began ruling: south china sea expansion, a trade war with the us, xinjiang detention camps, social credit system, lowest economic growth since records began, and now a horribly miscalculated attempt at rapid hk integration---all of which have made international headlines for bad reasons for china. one might almost call xi completely reckless, and i can't imagine there being nobody in the ccp who agrees.
 
Let's set them up with a few million M16A1s and enough ammo for each. Then supply them with air support from the third fleet and bring in as much in the way of supplies we can. The war with China is inevitable. May as well kick them when they're down.
They are not self-sufficient enough to make a serious bid for independence. Although they are no longer dependent on Mainland China for staple food imports, they still get much of their fresh water and electricity supply from Mainland.
 
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