Monday 29 September 2014

“Hands up, don’t shoot” comes to Hong Kong’s pro-democracy movement

Student protesters occupy streets surrounding the government headquarters in Hong Kong, Sunday evening, Sept. 28, 2014. A tense standoff between thousands of Hong Kong pro-democracy protesters and police warning of a crackdown spiraled into an extraordinary scene of chaos Sunday as the crowd jammed a busy road and clashed with officers wielding pepper spray. (AP Photo/Wally Santana

Thousands of pro-democracy demonstrations in Hong Kong have, perhaps unwittingly, united themselves with another protest movement some 8,000 miles away. Activists demanding free elections for the semi-autonomous territory have been holding their hands up in the air in a symbol of non-violent protest, a gesture many in the US recognize from recent protests in Ferguson, Missouri after an unarmed 18-year-old was shot to death by police.




RT @dangillmor Hong Kong “hands up, don’t shoot” emulation of Ferguson protests is such a powerful image: pic.twitter.com/TPc8xUAs3k


— Patrick Chovanec (@prchovanec) September 29, 2014




Most Hong Kong protesters aren’t purposefully mimicking “hands up, don’t shoot,”as some have suggested. Instead, the gesture is a result of training and instructions from protest leaders, who have told demonstrators to raise their hands with palms forward to signal their peaceful intentions to police.


Asked about any link between the gesture and Ferguson, Icy Ng, a 22-year-old design student at Hong Kong Polytechnic University said, “I don’t think so. We have our hands up for showing both the police and media that we have no weapons in our hands.” Ng had not heard of the Ferguson protests. Another demonstrator, with the pro-democracy group Occupy Central, Ellie Ng said the gesture had nothing to do with Ferguson and is intended to demonstrate that “Hong Kong protesters are peaceful, unarmed, and mild.”


Still, the gesture has taken on new meaning for Hong Kong residents whose relationship with the city’s police may never be the same. Hong Kong is one of the most intensively policed cities in the world, with a police force of 30,000 that rivals New York City’s but serves a fraction of New York’s population. The last time Hong Kong authorities used tear gas against demonstrators was in 2005, during demonstrations outside of a World Trade Organization meeting, and in 1967, when leftist activists rioted throughout the city.


Now, residents are shocked by images of students being tear gassed and elderly demonstrators being pepper sprayed in the face, footage that has prompted more protesters to join demonstrations on Monday.




Tear gas hitting the crowds on Harcourt Road at 6pm today. More photos: http://t.co/yMTl73fBCg. #OccupyCentral. pic.twitter.com/K1vm5UiB0B


— Laurel Chor (@laurelchor) September 28, 2014







Protesters chant slogans in front of the police during a confrontation in Hong Kong September 27, 2014.Reuters/Bobby Yip



A student protester in Hong Kong tries to negotiate with riot police as they fire pepper spray in to the crowd on Sunday, Sept. 28, 2014.AP Photo/Wally Santana)


Protesters walk through tear gas used by riot police against protesters after thousands of people blocked a main road at the financial central district in Hong Kong, Sunday, Sept. 28, 2014

Protesters walk through tear gas used by riot police against protesters on a main road at the financial central district in Hong Kong on Sunday, Sept. 28, 2014AP Photo/Vincent Yu



“Hands up, don’t shoot” comes to Hong Kong’s pro-democracy movement

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