A still image from a social media video shows a police officer aiming his gun at a protester before shooting him in Sai Wan Ho, Hong Kong on Nov. 11. (Photo by Cupid Producer via Reuters)
Hong Kong police opened fire and hit at least one protester on Monday, witnesses and media reports said, as chaos erupted across the city a day after officers fired tear gas to break up demonstrations that are entering their sixth month.
Police
fired live rounds at protesters on the eastern side of Hong Kong island, Cable
TV and other Hong Kong media reported. Cable TV said one protester was wounded
when police opened fire.
Video
footage showed a protester lying in a pool of blood with his eyes wide open.
Police also pepper-sprayed and subdued a woman nearby as plastic crates were
thrown at officers, the video shared on social media showed.
Reuters
could not immediately authenticate the footage.
The
Hospital Authority told Reuters a 21-year-old man suspected to have been
wounded during the incident in Sai Wan Ho on Hong Kong island was admitted to
hospital and was undergoing an operation.
Cable
TV reported that the unidentified protester was in a stable condition. Other
reports said he was critical.
A
Reuters witness said police later fired tear gas in the same area where the
protester was shot.
The video of the incident above. Warning the vision is graphic.
Police
said in a statement hard-line protesters had set up barricades at multiple
locations across the city and warned the demonstrators to “stop their
illegal acts immediately”.
They
did not comment immediately on the apparent shooting.
Anson
Yip, a 36-year-old Sai Wan Ho resident, said protesters were throwing rubbish
to create a road block when police, possibly from the traffic department, ran
to the scene.
“They
didn’t fight and the police ran and directly shot. There was three sounds, like
‘pam, pam, pam’,” Yip said.
“They
(the protesters) are against the government, that’s why the police just shot
them,” he said.
A
24-year-old man, one of several office workers gathered at the scene after the
shooting, said: “When I arrived the road was blocked and people were
yelling at the police, calling them murderers.” The man gave only his
surname of Wing.
Police have previously shot an 18-year-old protester and a 14-year-old, both of whom survived.
A man reacts at the site where a pro-democracy protester was shot by a policeman in Hong Kong on Nov. 11. (Photo by Anthony Wallace/AFP)
Angry protesters
Protests
have occurred at times daily, sometimes with little or no notice, disrupting
business and piling pressure on the city’s beleaguered government.
Protesters
are angry about what they see as police brutality and meddling by Beijing in
the former British colony’s freedoms, guaranteed by the “one country, two
systems” formula put in place when the territory returned to Chinese rule
in 1997.
China
denies interfering and has blamed Western countries for stirring up trouble.
The
latest violence comes after a student died in hospital last week following a
high fall as protesters were being dispersed by police.
Services
on some train and subway lines were disrupted early on Nov. 12, with riot
police deployed near stations and shopping malls. Many universities cancelled
classes on the same day and there were long traffic jams in some areas.
Activists
blocked roads and trashed shopping malls across Hong Kong’s New Territories and
Kowloon peninsula on Nov. 11 during a 24th straight weekend of anti-government
unrest.
The
violence spread to the Kowloon district of Mong Kok, one of the world’s most
densely populated areas. Police used water cannon and volley after volley of
tear gas to try to clear the main artery of Nathan Road, which was littered
with loose bricks under bright neon lights.
아시아가톨릭뉴스Human rights
19/11/11 Tensions escalate in Hong Kong as policeman shoots protestor at close range Reuters Reporters November 11, 2019 A still image from a