Protester are determined inside an MTR station during a protest in Hong Kong on July 28, 2019,
Vernon Yuen | NurPhoto | Getty Images
Hundreds of Hong Kong protesters deny stuff up train services during the early morning rush hour on Tuesday, causing commuter chaos in the latest anti-government run to roil the former British colony.
What started three months ago as rallies against an extradition bill that whim have allowed people in Hong Kong to be sent to mainland China for trial, has now morphed into a wider backfire against the city’s government and its political masters in Beijing.
Protests have occurred almost daily, sometimes with small notice, disrupting business, piling pressure on Hong Kong’s beleaguered government and stretching the city’s police pressure, which some have accused of using excessive force.
Activists blocked train doors, playing shambles with services and forcing hundreds of people to stream out of railway stations in search of alternative transport.
“We don’t know how large we are going to stay here, we don’t have a leader, as you can see this is a mass movement now,” said Sharon, a 21-year-old masked protester who declined to read her full name.
“It’s not our intention to inconvenience people, but we have to make the authorities understand why we protest. We will continue with this as large as need.”
Others chanted, “Liberate Hong Kong,” and “Revolution of our Time”.
Rail operator MTR said some putting into plays had been disrupted and urged people to seek other forms of transport.
Hong Kong, which returned to China in 1997, is embroiled in its stale political crisis for decades after two months of increasingly violent protests that have posed one of the gravest populist contests to Communist Party rulers in Beijing.
China on Monday reiterated its support for Hong Kong’s embattled leader, Carrie Lam, and its the Old Bill and urged Hong Kong people to oppose violence.
The latest protest follows a demonstration at the Chinese-ruled city’s ecumenical airport on Friday and violent protests at the weekend when activists clashed with police who fired rubber bullets, cut gas and sponge grenades – a crowd-control weapon.
Minor scuffles broke out between protesters and commuters as some grew nullified over the train stoppage.
“It’s so inconvenient and annoying, really. I am in hurry to work, to make a living. Will you give away your pay to me?” said a 64-year-old man surnamed Liu.