1. Skip to content
  2. Skip to main menu
  3. Skip to more DW sites
Politics

Hong Kong police threaten 'live bullets' at university siege

November 18, 2019

After a two-day standoff, police have stormed into a major university campus as protesters fought back with gasoline bombs and bows and arrows. Police have threatened to fire live bullets at "rioters."

https://p.dw.com/p/3TCXE
Protest in Hongkong
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/AP/A. Ibrahim

Hong Kong police on Monday swooped into a major university campus — where hundreds of protesters were trapped inside after police sealed off roads around the area — with tear gas and batons.

Fiery explosions could be seen inside Hong Kong's Polytechnic University as riot officers stormed into the building before dawn after both sides refused to back down. 

Police had created a cordon around the university to prevent the anti-government protesters from escaping as they moved in. 

'Afraid to leave campus'

"This is without a doubt the most highly charged 24 hours of this five-month protest movement so far," reported DW's Charlotte Chelsom-Pill outside the university where the standoff was ongoing.

"Protesters have been told to leave the campus area. As they attempted to run past police, they were met by tear gas and arrest. We're seeing images of protesters being tackled to the ground, some of them dragged across the floor during that arrest."

Police have declared the campus a riot scene. In Hong Kong, rioting is punishable by up to 10 years in jail.

Around 200 protesters were believed to be trapped inside the building. Most are understood to be students. Some told DW they were too afraid to leave the university.

Police fire tear gas at Hong Kong Polytechnic University
Almost 200 protesters are believed to be trapped inside the campus Image: Reuters/A. Abidi

Some of the protesters trapped on campus used a rope to lower themselves off a pedestrian bridge where motorbikes were waiting to transport them away from the university. It was unclear whether they got away safely, as police fired tear gas at them.

DW reporter Mathias Bölinger reported office workers in Hong Kong's central business district staged a lunchtime protest alongside radical protesters on Monday. The office workers apparently did not agree with an assessment by Carrie Lam that protesters paralyzing the city were selfish and were now "the enemy of the people."

Read more: Opinion: No political solution in sight in Hong Kong

Live bullets

Police fired tear gas volleys at the protesters to drive them back, many of whom climbed over a fence and headed back inside the university. 

Police spokesman Louis Lau issued a warning suggesting that a more proactive use of live rounds may be necessary in the face of rioters' use of petrol bombs and arrows. 

"If they continue such dangerous actions, we would have no choice but to use the minimum force necessary, including live rounds, to fire back," Lau said.

The editor-in-chief of China's Global Times tabloid on Sunday said Hong Kong police should use snipers to fire live ammunition at violent protesters.

"If the rioters are killed, the police should not have to bear legal responsibility,'' Hu Xijin posted on his Weibo social media, reported the Associated Press. He made similar comments on Twitter.

Read more: Hong Kong and the broken promise

What do Hong Kong students have to say about the standoff with police?

UK, EU voice 'deep concern'

Britain — which handed over Hong Kong to China in 1997 — remained "seriously concerned" by escalating violence in the territory.

"We continue to urge for calm and restraint on all sides and support the right to peaceful protest," a spokesman for British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said.

"We believe political dialogue is the only way forward and we want to see the Hong Kong authorities agree to a path to resolve the situation." He added Johnson had no plans as yet to make calls to the authorities.

Britain had earlier accused China of violating the "one country, two systems" principle it promised to uphold when the UK handed over the territory, saying the city's pro-Beijing government is becoming increasingly authoritarian and beholden to Beijing.

The European Commission said it was closely monitoring the situation and that reports of medical staff being arrested were a "source of deep concern."

"We've seen reports that first responders and other medical staff were detained by law enforcement forces while trying to provide assistance," foreign policy spokeswoman Maja Kocijancic said on Monday.

Tension escalates

Tension between police and demonstrators escalated after a media liaison officer was struck in the leg with an arrow on Sunday.

Police repeatedly attempted to break into the university after protesters refused to give in to an ultimatum to come out and surrender,  firing tear gas and water cannons at activists outside the campus just before midnight. 

The pro-democracy protesters had barricaded themselves inside the university for days, retaliating with gasoline bombs and bows and arrows. They had also assembled an arsenal of petrol bombs in an attempt to resist police. 

A policeman in riot gear detains a protester outside the Polytechnic University
Police stormed into the university as protesters fought back with gasoline bombs Image: picture-alliance/AP Photo/K. Cheung

Earlier, protesters set fires on bridges leading to the university as they tried to stop police from advancing in on their campus. They also shut down access to a major road tunnel under Hong Kong's harbor for several days.

Some protesters remained outside the university to deter police advancement. Many in the crowd wore raincoats and carried umbrellas to shield themselves.

The protesters had held fort all day Sunday near an intersection outside the university campus as police fired tear gas and water cannons at them. 

The protests were triggered months ago by a proposed law allowing for the extradition of criminal suspects to mainland China. Although the bill was ultimately dropped, the protests have expanded into a wider resistance movement demanding full democracy. 

The legislation was seen by many in Hong Kong as an attempt by Beijing to erode the autonomy guaranteed when Britain handed the territory over to China.  

kw, mvb/kl (AP, dpa, Reuters)

Each evening at 1830 UTC, DW's editors send out a selection of the day's hard news and quality feature journalism. You can sign up to receive it directly here.