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Hong Kong protests: Demonstrators defy police ban again | Hong Kong protests: Demonstrators defy police ban again |
(about 1 hour later) | |
Tens of thousands of protesters have taken to Hong Kong's streets, blocking major roads and defying a police ban. | |
The protesters wore black and held umbrellas, chanting anti-police slogans while marching through the territory's business district. | The protesters wore black and held umbrellas, chanting anti-police slogans while marching through the territory's business district. |
Police had given permission for a rally in Chater Garden, but warned that protests outside the park were illegal. | Police had given permission for a rally in Chater Garden, but warned that protests outside the park were illegal. |
On Saturday, police fired tear gas and rubber bullets at another pro-democracy protest in Yuen Long, in the north. | On Saturday, police fired tear gas and rubber bullets at another pro-democracy protest in Yuen Long, in the north. |
Hong Kong has seen eight consecutive weekends of anti-government and pro-democracy protests. | |
It is ranked as one of the safest cities in the world - but recent protests have been followed by violent clashes between demonstrators, police and masked men wielding sticks, who are suspected of being criminal gang members. | |
On Sunday, protesters marched from the business district in Central to Causeway Bay, a busy shopping area. | |
Others moved west towards Sheung Wan, where the Chinese government's offices are based, or Wan Chai, the Hong Kong police headquarters. | |
Some protesters chanted "reclaim Hong Kong" and "revolution of our times", or held up banners that read "end the violence". | |
Other demonstrators set up barricades in the street. | |
How did we get here? | |
Demonstrations began when the Hong Kong government introduced a controversial bill that would have enabled extraditions to mainland China. | |
It sparked huge protests as critics feared the bill would undermine Hong Kong's freedoms, and be used to target political activists. | |
The row intensified as police were accused of using excessive force on anti-extradition bill protesters. | |
Tensions increased further last Sunday, when suspected triad members descended on a subway station in Yuen Long, beating protesters, passersby and journalists with sticks. | |
Demonstrators accused the police of colluding with the triads - claims angrily denied by the police. | |
The anti-extradition protests have morphed over time into a wider movement. | |
While the government has paused work on the extradition bill, protesters now want it withdrawn completely, as well as an independent inquiry into police violence, and democratic reform. | |
They want the territory's leader, Carrie Lam, who is not democratically elected, and whose handling of the crisis has been widely criticised, to resign. | |
Some protesters have also expressed their anger at the mainland Chinese government, which they say has been eroding freedoms in Hong Kong. | |
Last week, demonstrators stormed the Chinese government's office and defaced the national emblem. | |
The authorities have now installed a protective casing around the sign. | |
Timeline of events 2019 | |
3 April - Hong Kong government introduces amendments to the city's extradition laws to the legislature that would allow criminal suspects to be extradited to mainland China. | |
9 June - In the first of many huge protests against the changes, an estimated million people march to government headquarters. | |
12 June - Anti-extradition bill protesters block roads and try to storm government buildings - police fire tear gas, rubber bullets and bean bag rounds at protesters, in the worst violence the city has seen in decades. | |
15 June - Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam indefinitely delays the bill in a dramatic reversal. | |
16 June - Despite this, an estimated two million people take to the streets demanding the complete withdrawal of the bill, an investigation into alleged police violence, and Carrie Lam's resignation. | |
21 June - As anger grows towards police, protests blockade police headquarters for 15 hours. They now also want protesters that were arrested to be exonerated. | |
1 July - On the anniversary of Hong Kong's handover from the UK to China, the Legislative Council (LegCo) building is stormed and broken into by protesters. | |
21 July- Protesters deface China's Liaison Office in Hong Kong. That same night mobs of men wearing white shirts attack protesters and commuters in Yuen Long station, near mainland China, in a new escalation of violence. |