logo

Police arrest 500 after huge Hong Kong protest

Thursday, 3 July 2014


HONG KONG, July 2 (AFP): Hong Kong police arrested more than 500 protesters at a sit-in early Wednesday following a huge march that organisers said mobilised half a million people demanding democratic reforms.
The arrests followed a largely peaceful march on Tuesday that protest leaders said brought the biggest crowds onto the streets since the city was handed over from Britain to China in 1997.
Police moved in at 3:00 am to break up the sit-in by about 2,000 protesters in the semi-autonomous city's Central financial district with some being dragged away by officers.
They said 511 demonstrators were arrested for illegal assembly or obstructing police, but pro-democracy activists and Amnesty International criticised the move as excessive.
Several pro-democracy lawmakers were among those arrested.
Police lifted activists, many lying on the ground with their arms chained to each other, onto coaches that took them to a temporary detention centre at a police college in Wong Chuk Hang district.
"I have no regrets!" one of them shouted, while others flashed V-for-victory signs.
A police spokeswoman said in a statement late Wednesday that 18 people had been released on bail while 364 people were released without charge. The rest remained detained pending further investigation.
"It was necessary for police to make arrests in order to quickly restore transportation and order in the Central core financial district," Hong Kong's security minister Lai Tung-kwok told reporters.