Whispers of ‘Umbrella Movement II’ as protesters gather in Central, Hong Kong
Photo by Anthony Tao
Demonstrators were back on the streets in Hong Kong on Tuesday night, with protests continuing into Wednesday morning. Thousands of people are currently convening in the districts of Admiralty and Central and jamming onto Harcourt Road in front of the city’s government offices — precisely where the Umbrella Movement protests, which lasted two and a half months, began in 2014.
On Monday, the day after watching hundreds of thousands of people march in the streets in opposition to a proposed extradition bill, Hong Kong chief executive Carrie Lam remained defiant about pushing the legislation through. “This bill is not initiated by the [Chinese] central people’s government,” she said. “I have not received any instruction.” Critics fear that if passed, Beijing could use the new law to target political opponents — a concern that Lam and lawmakers have called a misunderstanding.
There’s no misunderstanding about this current scene:
Protesters urge passersby to join them, as barricades are used to bridge road divisions.
👉In full: https://t.co/kmLJLFCnSX
Others are making lists of supplies needed "so we can stay overnight," one protester told HKFP. pic.twitter.com/5gxhAcx6pH— Hong Kong Free Press HKFP (@hkfp) June 12, 2019
https://twitter.com/austinramzy/status/1138630014046429185
You asked: “any indication protesters are setting up camp for the long-term?” Survey says… https://t.co/g16R6InJmT pic.twitter.com/hhzih4dwwK
— Antony Dapiran (@antd) June 12, 2019
https://twitter.com/HongKongHermit/status/1138626620804091904
Daily commute through Admiralty… pic.twitter.com/cODh0OwJ7d
— Neil Gough (@n_gough) June 12, 2019
Hong Kong demonstrators have blocked Harcourt Road-Gloucester Road, a major central thoroughfare.
Protesters also raised barricades on Lung Wo Road, near the Legislative Council building, echoing a tactic used in the 2014 Occupy demonstrations.
More: https://t.co/GJxqqtcYva pic.twitter.com/rk76RH6pxr
— Bloomberg Politics (@bpolitics) June 12, 2019
CNN reports:
Hong Kong police are calling on protesters who have barricaded roads around the legislative building to disperse as soon as possible, or they will take “appropriate force.”
In a statement, police say protesters who are blocking traffic have damaged police and private cars, “exceeding the definition of Peaceful Protest.”
They are calling for “people who have barricaded these vehicles to leave as soon as possible, or we will take appropriate force to rescue those who are trapped.”
Today was the day for a scheduled second reading of the proposed extradition bill. That reading, originally set for 11 am, has been postponed, according to a short statement released by the legislative council.
More updates as they become available.
UPDATE: A video I made — footage taken earlier this afternoon around 1 pm:
And some photos:
UPDATE, 4:40 pm: Tear gas and rubber bullets being used:
JUST IN: The moment tear gas was released, for the first time since 2014, to disperse protesters in Hong Kong.
Full coverage: https://t.co/kmLJLFCnSX #NoToChinaExtradition pic.twitter.com/xEpBjBmaaU— Hong Kong Free Press HKFP (@hkfp) June 12, 2019
Protesters flee pepper spray – can confirm my face is burning #HongKong #extraditionbill pic.twitter.com/eTSQkVOVA8
— Erin Hale (@erinhale) June 12, 2019
https://twitter.com/LianainFilms/status/1138723093055098881
Police deliberately shoot suspected rubber bullet and CS gas towards unarmed #antiELAB #NoExtraditionToChina pic.twitter.com/b7SJ2zUSYP
— Galileo Cheng (@galileocheng) June 12, 2019
UPDATE: Shortly after tear gas was used to disperse crowds:
Hong Kong police fire tear gas and rubber bullets at protestors