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'Where were the police?' Hong Kong outcry after masked thugs launch attack

Pro-democracy activists and lawmakers in Hong Kong have accused the police of standing by as men dressed in white attacked commuters and protesters late on Sunday, leaving 45 hospitalised, including one who is critically injured.

Video footage showed dozens of men, most in masks, storming a mass transit station in Yuen Long, chasing passengers and beating them with rods. Among those hurt in the attack were demonstrators returning from a large anti-government rally, as well as a pregnant woman and a woman holding an infant, according to witnesses.

The footage emerged after an anti-government march by hundreds of thousands of people on Sunday that descended into chaos as police and protesters fought running battles, as riot police fired teargas and rubber bullets to disperse protesters.

A woman sobbed while recounting what happened during the Yuen Long attack, telling one witness in audio circulated online: “They beat people in the carriage indiscriminately whoever they were, even people who were returning home from work … Some men were shielding us. They didn’t fight back otherwise we would have been beaten even worse. They beat even women and children.”

Video filmed inside the train showed passengers screaming and crying as they attempted to shield themselves with umbrellas. The attackers used metal and wooden rods, as well as canes and brooms.

Journalist Ryan Lau Chun Kong tends to his wounds after he was attacked at Yuen Long mass transit station.
Journalist Ryan Lau Chun Kong tends to his wounds after he was attacked at Yuen Long mass transit station. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images

Footage showed a young man dressed in black being punched and kneed in the stomach by several men. A female journalist was beaten while filming the attack. Photos showed commuters bleeding and smears of blood on the station ground.

When police arrived at the station after 11pm, the assailants had left and angry protesters demanded to know why they had taken so long to get there. Police left and the attackers later came back a second time, breaking into a closed gate of the train station.

Hong Kong’s Hospital Authority said 45 people between the ages of 18 and 64, were injured in the attack, including one man who was in critical condition. Four men and one woman were in a serious condition.

On Monday morning, activists roundly criticised the police. A lawmaker from the opposition Democracy party said his party was investigating the potential involvement of organised crime. “Is Hong Kong now allowing triads to do what they want, beating up people on the street with weapons?” Democratic party lawmaker Lam Cheuk-ting, who was among the injured, asked reporters.

Pro-democracy lawmaker Ray Chan tweeted: “Hong Kong has 1 of the world’s highest cop to population ratio. Where were @hkpoliceforce?”

Yoho Mall, a shopping centre connected to the mass transit station, said some shops had closed amid concerns the armed men would return on Monday evening.

Activists believe thugs were hired during pro-democracy protests in 2014, possibly from southern China, where local authorities have been known to hire men to intimidate residents or petitioners.

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A widely circulated video showed pro-Beijing lawmaker Junius Ho, who lives in Yuen Long, shaking hands with men in white and giving them a thumbs up. In response to accusations that he had hired the men to go after protesters, Ho said in a press briefing on Monday that he had nothing to do with the attack. Asked why he did not call the police, Ho said: “They appeared to be normal residents, just like the protesters in your eyes.”

Junius Ho’s office after it was trashed by protesters.
Junius Ho’s office after it was trashed by protesters. Photograph: Philip Fong/AFP/Getty Images

The police, who entered a village near the station in Yuen Long where groups of men in white had gathered in the early hours of Monday, said they had seen no weapons and made no arrests because they “could not be sure of who was involved.”

Flanked by Hong Kong’s police commissioner, security chief and government ministers on Monday, Hong Kong’s chief executive Carrie Lam appeared to blame both sides. “Violence will only breed more violence and at the end of the day the whole of Hong Kong and the people will suffer,” she said.

Asked whether authorities had any role in the attacks Lam and Police Commissioner Stephen Lo issued a vehement denial. “We will pull out all the stops to investigate and bring the attackers to justice,” Lo said. “We and the triads are totally at opposite ends. People must not insult us by linking us with the attackers.”

The press conference grew heated as Lam sidestepped questions. She then walked out while questions were still being yelled by journalists.

Sunday’s violence marks the latest unrest in Hong Kong, where mass protests have been held for seven consecutive weeks, often resulting in clashes.

Demonstrators march in Hong Kong on Sunday.
Demonstrators march in Hong Kong on Sunday. Photograph: Ivan Abreu/SOPA Images/REX/Shutterstock

The protests, which began over a bill that would allow suspects in Hong Kong to be extradited to mainland China, have take on wider demands, including an investigation into police behaviour. The violence in Yuen Long and the police’s response is likely to be the focus of another protest.

On Sunday, thousands of protesters attending a peaceful anti-government march defied the police-sanctioned route and pushed westwards to Beijing’s representative office in Hong Kong, where they graffitied the building’s walls, threw eggs at it, and defaced the emblem of the People’s Republic of China.

Speaking outside the building on Monday, Wang Zhimin, director of Beijing’s liaison office, said an “illegal mob” had “seriously hurt the feelings of the entire Chinese people”. Chinese state media called the attack a “blatant challenge to the central government”.

A protester throws an egg at police headquarters in Hong Kong on Sunday.
A protester throws an egg at police headquarters in Hong Kong on Sunday. Photograph: Philip Fong/AFP/Getty Images

The demonstrations challenge Beijing’s authority over the former British colony, returned to Chinese control in 1997. Under the one country, two systems framework, Hong Kong is meant to maintain a high degree of autonomy from the mainland, with an independent judiciary and a free press. But critics say they have witnessed Hong Kong’s freedoms quickly disappearing.

Among protesters’ demands are democratic reforms that would give Hong Kongers the ability to directly elect their leaders. Protest groups have vowed to continue until their demands are met. “I don’t see this ending. It looks like it’s just going to escalate … it’s almost becoming ungovernable,” said Victoria Hui, a political scientist from Hong Kong, now at Notre Dame University.

Riot police rest after clashes with protesters in Hong Kong
Riot police rest after clashes with protesters in Hong Kong Photograph: Philip Fong/AFP/Getty Images