Hong Kong suspends subway and train service to quell protests
All subway and trains services are closed in Hong Kong after another night of rampaging violence that a new ban on face masks failed to quell. After widespread overnight arson attacks, looting, fighting with police and beatings, the government on Saturday called on the public to swing behind it in condemning the increasingly violent protests.
John Lee, the government’s security secretary, said that by not condemning violence, people are stoking it. The MTR transport network, a frequent target of rioters, said all its services are suspended, including the rail line to Hong Kong international airport.
Thousands took part in unplanned protests on Friday that erupted immediately after the colonial-era face mask ban was announced, BBC News reports. Hong Kong’s embattled leader Carrie Lam announced the measure Friday afternoon but protesters crammed streets in the central business district and staged demonstrations in other areas of the city, shouting “Hong Kong people, resist!” They set fires and vandalized subway stations, prompting police to respond with tear gas.An officer fired a single shot from his gun in self-defense after he was attacked by protesters in the northern Yuen Long district, said police spokeswoman Yolanda Yu. She said a man was wounded, but that police didn’t know exactly how he got shot. A police official, who requested anonymity because he wasn’t authorized to speak to the news media, said the victim is 14. A Hospital Authority spokesman said the teen was in serious but not critical condition. The teen became the second victim of gunfire since pro-democracy protests began in June and just three days after an 18-year-old protester was shot by a riot police officer at close range. Lam said the mask ban would be “an effective deterrent to radical behavior.” “We must save Hong Kong – the present Hong Kong and the future Hong Kong,” she said. “We must stop the violence. … We can’t just leave the situation to get worse and worse.” Lam said she would seek the legislature’s backing for the ban later. She insisted Hong Kong was not in a state of emergency but wouldn’t rule out a further toughening of measures if violence continued. She also bristled at a suggestion that the mask ban nudged the territory closer to authoritarian rule. She said she was not acting under orders from Beijing, which she visited this week when Communist Party leaders celebrated 70 years in power on Tuesday. But Yang Guang, a Chinese spokesman for Hong Kong affairs, expressed support late Friday, saying it was time for stern measures to end the conflict. Face masks have become a hallmark of protesters in Hong Kong, even at peaceful marches, amid fears of retribution at work or of being denied access to schooling, public housing and other government-funded services. Some young protesters also wear full gas masks and goggles to protect against tear gas. Many are concerned their identities could be shared with the massive state-security apparatus that helps keep the Communist Party in power in mainland China, where high-tech surveillance including facial recognition technology is ubiquitous.