Hong Kong Police: Unsure Whether China Would Notify Them of Any Military Plans

Hong Kong Police: Unsure Whether China Would Notify Them of Any Military Plans
Police officers in riot gear at the Citic Bridge in Hong Kong on June 13, 2019. (Li Yi/The Epoch Times)

HONG KONG —Three senior Hong Kong police officers said on Aug. 16 that they were unsure whether they would be informed ahead of time if Chinese paramilitary or army forces were deployed in Hong Kong to quell mass demonstrations in the territory.

They agreed to speak to a group of reporters for foreign media only on the condition of anonymity.

Images this week have showed paramilitary exercises by Chinese troops in neighboring mainland city of Shenzhen.

Protests that began in early June have paralyzed parts of the territory, including its international airport, and led to more than 700 arrests. The largely peaceful rallies attended by millions of Hong Kong residents have increasingly concluded in clashes between some protesters and police. While protesters have thrown plastic bottles and other objects at law enforcement—but on the rare occasion bricks and gasoline bombs—riot police have countered all protesters with tear gas and rubber bullets in attempts to disperse the crowds.

WARNING: Some readers may find these images distressing

The senior police officers said the situation is “worse than Occupy Central,” a 79-day pro-democracy sit-in in 2014. While the current movement was initially a response to now-suspended extradition legislation, the focus has since shifted to granting Hongkongers a right to vote for their own leader and demands for an independent inquiry into alleged police brutality.

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Medical staff and protesters carry an injured man as they face off with policemen near the Shum Shui Po police station in Hong Kong on Aug. 14, 2019. (Vincent Yu/AP Photo)

No officer has been disciplined for use of excessive force since the protests began, according to the senior police officers.

“It’s difficult to say if we are really losing public support,” one officer said. Another officer said he believed there was a “silent majority” of Hong Kong residents who support the police but are afraid to publicly voice their opinions.

Residents of neighborhoods hosting the protests have taken to heckling police officers and calling them “gangsters” after media footage showed police officers swinging their batons at protesters and firing rubber bullets and tear gas at close range. The senior police officers said about 300 of their colleagues have had their personal information shared online. In some cases, some people have appeared at officers’ homes at odd hours or circulated photos of their children.

China’s ambassador to the UK said Thursday the Beijing government will not “sit on its hands” if the situation in Hong Kong continues to deteriorate after more than two months of near-daily street protests.

This week’s clashes highlighted the hardening positions of pro-democracy protesters and the authorities, which show no sign of abating as long as the government continues to refuse calls for dialogue. Along with scrapping the extradition legislation, under which criminal suspects could be tried in mainland China, where critics say they could face torture and unfair justice, protesters are demanding electoral reforms and an investigation into alleged police abuses, with some calling also for the resignation of Chief Executive Carrie Lam.

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Protesters gather to take part in a march to the West Kowloon railway station, where high-speed trains depart for the Chinese mainland, during a demonstration against a proposed extradition bill in Hong Kong on July 7, 2019. (HECTOR RETAMAL/AFP/Getty Images)

Liu Xiaoming asserted that “extremists” masquerading as pro-democracy activists are dragging Hong Kong “down a dangerous road.”

“We have enough solutions and enough power within the limit of the Basic Law to quell any unrest swiftly,” he said, referring to Hong Kong’s mini-constitution adopted after the former British colony was handed over to China in 1997. “We hope this will end in an orderly way. In the meantime, we are fully prepared for the worst.”

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Policemen in riot gear stand guard during a face off with protesters in Hong Kong on Aug. 14, 2019. (Vincent Yu/AP Photo)

Satellite photos show what appear to be armored personnel carriers and other vehicles belonging to the China’s paramilitary People’s Armed Police parked in a sports complex in the city of Shenzhen, across the border in Hong Kong, in what some have interpreted as a threat from Beijing to use increased force against protesters.

China’s Defense Ministry has pointed to a legal provision that would allow Hong Kong-based People’s Liberation Army troops to be deployed for “public order maintenance” at the request of the city government. The troops, called the Hong Kong Garrison, released a promotional video earlier this month that showed soldiers partaking in a “riot drill” in which they fired tear gas and water cannons at people who appeared to be protesters.

Hong Kong authorities, however, have maintained that they are capable of handling the situation themselves.

The senior police officials said they have 3,000 officers who are currently deployed for riot control operations and hundreds others to draw from.

Flights have mostly resumed after being halted by mass demonstrations and spasms of violence at Hong Kong’s airport on Monday and Tuesday. Police made five arrests Tuesday night and 17 more on Wednesday during clashes outside police stations in the Sham Shui Po district.

The unrest as a result of the extradition bill is also having an effect on what is already a difficult economic situation for the financial services and export hub, with the forecast for economic growth for the year downgraded to 0 to 1 percent, city Financial Secretary Paul Chan announced Thursday.

“Domestically, the recent social incidents have hit the retail trade, restaurants and tourism, adding a further blow to an already weak economy, and also affected the international image of Hong Kong,” Chan said.

A total of 29 countries have issued travel safety alerts for Hong Kong, while international credit rating agencies have also expressed concern about the situation in the territory, he said.

In a possibly hopeful sign for the opposition, a leader of an earlier protest movement imprisoned on public disorder charges was released on bail Thursday.

Benny Tai was sentenced to 16 months in April as one of nine leaders put on trial for their part in a 2014 drive for universal suffrage known as the Umbrella Movement. He was allowed to return home on $12,755 bail but was barred from leaving Hong Kong and will have his appeal heard in late February, according to the court.

By Yanan Wang and Christopher Bodeen

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