San Francisco Chronicle

Police blasted for using force to quell protest

- By Mike Ives and Alexandra Stevenson Mike Ives and Alexandra Stevenson are New York Times writers.

HONG KONG — Hong Kong’s security forces faced widespread criticism Thursday over the tear gas and rubber bullets that local police used a day earlier to suppress tens of thousands of people demonstrat­ing against an unpopular bill that would allow extraditio­ns to mainland China.

Criticism of the security force’s measures came swiftly and raised the political cost for Carrie Lam, chief executive of Hong Kong, who firmly supports the bill. Debate on the legislatio­n, which had been postponed from Wednesday to Thursday, was again postponed for at least two more days.

Videos of the protests in which officers appear to be using excessive force circulated widely across social media, and the police action was condemned by pro-democracy activists, human rights groups and opposition lawmakers.

Footage of unarmed protesters fleeing like ants from clouds of tear gas or facing off with riot police officers pointing batons at them was broadcast around the world, an unfamiliar sight in the wealthy Asian financial hub famed for its glitzy skyscraper­s.

Even a number of former senior officials joined in criticizin­g the police actions, as well as the bill. Joseph Wong, a former civil service secretary, told a local broadcaste­r that Lam’s decision to push ahead with the measure despite such strong opposition was “nothing short of a dictator’s act” and called for an independen­t review of the police’s use of force.

The Hong Kong police chief defended his officers, saying they were mostly restrained but had to respond with force when some protesters tried to storm the Legislativ­e Council.

On Thursday, tensions had eased, though police physically prevented a group of pro-democracy lawmakers from completing a symbolic protest march toward Lam’s residence. Some of the lawmakers lamented that their hometown, normally a peaceful haven for bankers, lawyers and traders, had begun to feel like a police state.

 ?? Lam Yik Fei / New York Times ?? Police block politician Eddie Chu Hoi-dick during a pro-democracy lawmakers’ march to Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam’s home, a day after violent protests against an extraditio­n bill.
Lam Yik Fei / New York Times Police block politician Eddie Chu Hoi-dick during a pro-democracy lawmakers’ march to Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam’s home, a day after violent protests against an extraditio­n bill.

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