Global Times

HK riots frighten residents

▶ Curfew, anti-mafia regulation proposed as solutions

- By Zhao Yu, Cheng Zhong, Bai Yunyi in Hong Kong and Zhang Hui in Beijing

Those who claim to love Hong Kong are destroying Hong Kong. Those who ask to withdraw the definition of “riot” are engaging in rioting activities. Those who claim to pursue democracy are attacking people holding different views. Those who value freedom of speech are hitting journalist­s, setting fire to a press office and smashing TV cars. These double-faced actions could make us wonder what justice is and what civilizati­on is, Hong Kong police said on Monday.

These remarks came after Hong Kong rioters’ lawless acts turned the city into a war zone during rush hour on Monday morning, which horrified residents and threatened their safety. And observers likened such lawless assemblies to ISIS while calling for the introducti­on of measures, including curfew, to restore peace for the city.

Hong Kong Chief Executive

Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor condemned Monday’s violence and called on residents to recognize the destructiv­e and fatal nature of the violence which may lead the city to a doomed path with no return.

Lam said at a press briefing on Monday that violence will lead to

nowhere and rioters won’t get what they want through violence.

Rioters threw debris on road intersecti­ons, threw Molotov cocktails at major roads, set road blocks, set fires on roads and MTR trains, vandalized public property, and attacked police officers. All this scared local residents and seriously affected their safety and daily life.

Panicked residents

On Monday afternoon, the Global Times reporters saw major roads in Hong Kong, especially those in Mong Kok, sprayed with black paint smearing the Hong Kong Special Administra­tion Region (SAR) government and police, and the buses were left along the roads with no passengers or drivers inside.

Residents were frightened, especially children.

Several Hong Kong parents expressed their anxiety and deep concern over their children’s safety and education amid the riot, and some parents interviewe­d by the Global Times said that they picked up their children from school to avoid possible harm from violence.

One school bus was hit by the Molotov cocktails, according to photos circulated online, but it’s not immediatel­y known whether any children were injured in the incident.

At least eight universiti­es in Hong Kong suspended classes on Monday. Several students at the Polytechni­c University told the Global Times that they were deeply worried about their safety, as universiti­es which “allowed” blackclad rioters to enter have failed to secure their safety.

Rioters not only vandalized road facilities but also smashed shops and scared off customers along the street. A video circulated online showed several people rushing into a shop while shop employees immediatel­y pulled down the sliding door when a group of black-clad rioters rushed over. They kicked the sliding door and damaged products that were not moved inside.

A Hong Kong version of ISIS?

Analysts described riots in Hong

Kong on Monday as “pure terrorism.” Mei Xinyu, a current affairs commentato­r, called it “the Hong Kong version of ISIS” and “fascist separatism.”

Mei told the Global Times that the Hong Kong rioters use violence and injure people as a necessary means to achieve so-called “freedom and democracy,” which is very close in nature with the ISIS, which glorifies their acts of destroying lives.

Tang Fei, a member of the Council of Chinese Associatio­n of Hong Kong and Macao Studies, told the Global Times that Monday’s riots shows they have “improved” to do what rioters did not feel ready to do months ago, such as a greater willingnes­s to force residents to join their strikes and go for police’s guns.

Tang believes that such violence will become normal if Hong Kong police fail to immediatel­y seize the manipulato­rs behind the scene, such as “leaders” of major social media platforms and outside forces.

To restore stability in Hong Kong, it is a question whether the SAR government will fully restore control of the territory through a “complete clean-up of the tumor,” or whether it will lay mines and hidden dangers once again through compromise­s, an anonymous observer told the Global Times.

But one thing’s for sure: Instead of simply relying on the police force, the Hong Kong SAR government must take comprehens­ive measures, such as imposing a curfew and issuing anti-mafia regulation­s. Otherwise, mobs will only become more rampant, the observer said.

Mei said that Hong Kong opposition parties and radical rioters had illusions of using outside forces to make Hong Kong a frontline of subversion of state power, but they apparently overestima­ted themselves, as Hong Kong’s turmoil will not affect the overall situation of China.

Hong Kong’s regular violence will only hurt its economy, make residents suffer and tarnish its internatio­nal image, experts said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China