Saudi Press

Saudi Arabia and the world
Friday, May 22, 2026

Four months of Hong Kong protests: an innocence lost

An estimated 1 million people marched peacefully on June 9, calling for the withdrawal of a controversial extradition bill. Four months on, the city has become familiar with intense violence, wanton destruction and a bitterly divided society, while more than 2,000 people have been arrested.
All was peaceful when an estimated 1 million people took to the streets of Hong Kong on June 9 to protest against an extradition bill that would have allowed fugitives to be sent to mainland China, among other jurisdictions.

They marched for 7½ hours that day, without any incident. No window panes were broken. No bricks were hurled at police officers. No fires were set. No MTR stations were trashed.

Today, four months later, that event seems like a distant memory of a very different Hong Kong.

Since then, the city has experienced 18 consecutive weeks of increasingly violent protests, nearly all including clashes between masked, black-clad crowds and police.

The more radical among the protesters have blocked roads, set off fires, hurled petrol bombs, destroyed MTR stations and vandalised banks and restaurants regarded as having links with Beijing.

In separate incidents, protesters stormed the Legislative Council complex, and besieged the Beijing liaison office, pelting it with eggs, defacing the national emblem and spray-painting anti-Beijing expletives on its walls. Protests have disrupted flights at Hong Kong’s international airport and caused the MTR system to be shut down completely for the first time in 40 years.

Chief Executive Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor and her government have yet to produce a plan to quell the social unrest and get Hong Kong back to normal.

The protesters made five demands: the withdrawal of the extradition bill, an independent inquiry into use of force by the police, amnesty for arrested protesters, a halt to describing the protests as riots, and the implementation of universal suffrage in Hong Kong.

Lam went so far as to suspend the unpopular bill, but it took three months before she finally gave in and announced that it
would be formally withdrawn. Protesters responded with a new rallying call: “Five demands, not one less.”

Police said on Tuesday that 2,363 people have been arrested since June 9, with about half over the past month alone. Those arrested include 77 who disregarded the law banning masks, which came into force last Saturday.

With no end to the worsening violence, vandalism and disruption, observers have come round to saying that Hong Kong is now experiencing a new normal of social unrest that is not about to end any time soon.

A source close to the Hong Kong government said Beijing was unwilling to make concessions to the protesters’ remaining demands, particularly their call for political reform.

“Violence and skirmishes between police and protesters will continue and escalate possibly till the first half of next year,” the source said.

“Like it or not, this could become the ‘new normal’. Society, and even Beijing, may get used to this if things are confined to ‘weekend rituals’ and do not go really out of control. The Hong Kong government and police will not hesitate to arrest more protesters to scare off the outer layers of the anti-government movement.”

The source said the only realistic hope was that the government will be forced to set up a commission of inquiry after the Independent Police Complaints Council presents its report on the police action since June. It is due to be released by early January.


Beijing and the Hong Kong government: What is the strategy here?

For Beijing, the siege of its liaison office in the city on July 21 marked a turning point on how it viewed the protests. At the end of a peaceful march organised by the Civil Human Right Front, hundreds of radical protesters pelted the premises with eggs, defaced the national emblem and spray painted anti-Beijing expletives on the wall.

At the very start of the anti-government protests in June, Wang Zhimin, director of the liaison office, noted that most Hong Kong residents expressed their aspirations through peaceful and rational means and said this showed how civilised the city was.


All that has changed too.

Beijing has stressed that ending the chaos and violence is the top priority and it is leaving it to Lam’s embattled government to restore law and order. Its patience was also being tested, it indicated in its latest statement at the end of last week when it said “the current chaotic situation … cannot continue indefinitely”.

A mainland Chinese expert familiar with Hong Kong affairs warned that the small but persistent signs of separatism among some young protesters in the city were red flags.

“Hong Kong people must recognise the severity when many young people chant slogans like ‘Liberate Hong Kong, revolution of our times’,” said the expert, who declined to be named.

“Such slogans are unacceptable to the central government. If you look at the history of Tibet and Xinjiang, it is impossible to break Hong Kong away from the mainland.”

Lam said on Tuesday that, aside from last weekend’s ban on masks which provoked more protests, she had no immediate plans for more legislation or to invoke emergency powers.

But a source familiar with the government’s position said: “All options are on the table when the government ponders possible measures to curb violence.”

The source declined to comment on the possibility that emergency laws might be invoked to extend the 48-hour period of detention before an arrested person is charged.

The emergency laws give the chief executive the authority to “make any regulations whatsoever which he [or she] may consider desirable in the public interest” if she considers it an occasion of “emergency or public danger”.

The wide range of powers extends to the appropriation of property, censorship of media, arrests, detentions and deportations, and the power to enter and search premises.

Ivan Choy Chi-keung, a political scientist at Chinese University, said the Hong Kong government appears clueless as it does not seem to know whether to take a tough or moderate stance in the face of ongoing protests.

He felt that Lam’s plan to speak directly with Hongkongers to find a way to end the unrest was now in disarray. “Carrie Lam introduced the anti-mask law eight days after organising the community dialogue on September 26. I think it’s nearly impossible to launch another round of dialogues as the tension escalates,” he said.


Protesters: Can they pull back from the brink?

While Lam’s government appears unable to get a grip on solving the crisis, the same, ironically, can be said of the protesters on how to soldier on with their cause.

The level of violence they have employed has escalated to such an extent that ordinary Hongkongers now shrug off earlier events such as the storming of the Legislative Council building on July 1 as minor compared with the destruction seen in recent weeks.

Intriguingly, there appears to be have been some self-reflection within the seemingly leaderless movement. Hours after mobs trashed MTR stations and vandalised shops and banks with mainland links last Friday night in response to the anti-mask law, several posts popped up on the protesters’ virtual command centre, the Reddit-like site LIHKG, questioning the wisdom of such moves.

Someone soon offered new “guidelines”, reminding protesters to trash only businesses run by gangsters, as well as government offices and offices of pro-Beijing politicians. Shops and restaurants owned by Beijing-friendly businessmen should only be “decorated” with graffiti and “Lennon Walls” of colourful sticky notes bearing anti-government and pro-democracy messages.

“We are largely fighting for democracy and freedom, but what we are doing now appears to be attacking those who are not with us,” a user wrote on LIHKG.

Another said: “Only dictators are intolerant of dissenting views. What’s the difference between the Communist Party and us, if we ‘renovate’ the stores just because their owners have a different point of view?”

Others called for the violence to be reduced to retain international support, particularly from the United States.
But others heaped scorn on such advice.

“It’s not a matter of having different political views now, but … those who are still supporting the police force are no longer human,” one said.

The notion of seeing the other side as less than human underscores how far the movement has strayed from its peaceful origins on June 9, when the main aim was to block the extradition bill.

The protesters are becoming aware though, that ordinary Hongkongers are affected by the trashing of MTR stations, ATMs, bank fronts and shops, the closure of supermarkets and convenience stores, and the disruption to daily life.

Political scientists monitoring the protesters say there is a dynamic “collective restraint mechanism” within the movement, and that the radical pull back each time they realise they have gone too far.

“It is clear that the mechanism has been weakened,” said Lingnan University academic Samson Yuen Wai-hei, who has been doing field work during the protests.

“With the police force escalating its use of force and the government invoking emergency powers to implement the mask ban, it has become difficult for those peaceful demonstrators to restrain their peers.”

Yuen warned that the protesters’ new attitude of taking the law into their own hands could prove fatal to the movement if someone was killed by such vigilantism. Last Sunday, for example, the police hit out at brutal attacks on ordinary citizens after three cases of bloody fist fights.

“They are walking a very fine line,” Yuen said. “If someone dies, it will be impossible for peaceful protesters to advise their comrades in a friendly way – they will have to condemn them as they won’t want the movement to be associated with the incident.”

But Chinese University political scientist Dr Ma Ngok noted that protesters scaled down their actions on Monday and Tuesday, partly because frontline radicals had been arrested and others were reflecting on what they had done.

Four months since the start of the protests, Hong Kong has become familiar with intense violence, wanton destruction and a bitterly divided society, while more than 2,000 people have been arrested. Illustration: Adolfo ArranzFour months since the start of the protests, Hong Kong has become familiar with intense violence, wanton destruction and a bitterly divided society, while more than 2,000 people have been arrested. Illustration: Adolfo Arranz
Four months since the start of the protests, Hong Kong has become familiar with intense violence, wanton destruction and a bitterly divided society, while more than 2,000 people have been arrested. Illustration: Adolfo Arranz
All was peaceful when an estimated 1 million people took to the streets of Hong Kong on June 9 to protest against an extradition bill that would have allowed fugitives to be sent to mainland China, among other jurisdictions.
They marched for 7½ hours that day, without any incident. No window panes were broken. No bricks were hurled at police officers. No fires were set. No MTR stations were trashed.
Today, four months later, that event seems like a distant memory of a very different Hong Kong.
Since then, the city has experienced 18 consecutive weeks of increasingly violent protests, nearly all including clashes between masked, black-clad crowds and police.
The more radical among the protesters have blocked roads, set off fires, hurled petrol bombs, destroyed MTR stations and vandalised banks and restaurants regarded as having links with Beijing.
In separate incidents, protesters stormed the Legislative Council complex, and besieged the Beijing liaison office, pelting it with eggs, defacing the national emblem and spray-painting anti-Beijing expletives on its walls. Protests have disrupted flights at Hong Kong’s international airport and caused the MTR system to be shut down completely for the first time in 40 years.
Chief Executive Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor and her government have yet to produce a plan to quell the social unrest and get Hong Kong back to normal.
DON'T MISS CRITICAL EVENTS IN HONG KONG
Get our newsletter sent Monday to Friday
your email
SIGN UP
By registering, you agree to our T&C and Privacy Policy
The protesters made five demands: the withdrawal of the extradition bill, an independent inquiry into use of force by the police, amnesty for arrested protesters, a halt to describing the protests as riots, and the implementation of universal suffrage in Hong Kong.
Lam went so far as to suspend the unpopular bill, but it took three months before she finally gave in and announced that it would be formally withdrawn. Protesters responded with a new rallying call: “Five demands, not one less.”

Police said on Tuesday that 2,363 people have been arrested since June 9, with about half over the past month alone. Those arrested include 77 who disregarded the law banning masks, which came into force last Saturday.
With no end to the worsening violence, vandalism and disruption, observers have come round to saying that Hong Kong is now experiencing a new normal of social unrest that is not about to end any time soon.
A source close to the Hong Kong government said Beijing was unwilling to make concessions to the protesters’ remaining demands, particularly their call for political reform.
“Violence and skirmishes between police and protesters will continue and escalate possibly till the first half of next year,” the source said.

“Like it or not, this could become the ‘new normal’. Society, and even Beijing, may get used to this if things are confined to ‘weekend rituals’ and do not go really out of control. The Hong Kong government and police will not hesitate to arrest more protesters to scare off the outer layers of the anti-government movement.”
The source said the only realistic hope was that the government will be forced to set up a commission of inquiry after the Independent Police Complaints Council presents its report on the police action since June. It is due to be released by early January.
Beijing and the Hong Kong government: What is the strategy here?
For Beijing, the siege of its liaison office in the city on July 21 marked a turning point on how it viewed the protests. At the end of a peaceful march organised by the Civil Human Right Front, hundreds of radical protesters pelted the premises with eggs, defaced the national emblem and spray painted anti-Beijing expletives on the wall.

At the very start of the anti-government protests in June, Wang Zhimin, director of the liaison office, noted that most Hong Kong residents expressed their aspirations through peaceful and rational means and said this showed how civilised the city was.
All that has changed too.
Beijing has stressed that ending the chaos and violence is the top priority and it is leaving it to Lam’s embattled government to restore law and order. Its patience was also being tested, it indicated in its latest statement at the end of last week when it said “the current chaotic situation … cannot continue indefinitely”.

A mainland Chinese expert familiar with Hong Kong affairs warned that the small but persistent signs of separatism among some young protesters in the city were red flags.
“Hong Kong people must recognise the severity when many young people chant slogans like ‘Liberate Hong Kong, revolution of our times’,” said the expert, who declined to be named.
“Such slogans are unacceptable to the central government. If you look at the history of Tibet and Xinjiang, it is impossible to break Hong Kong away from the mainland.”
Hong Kong government wary of labelling protesters ‘terrorists’
Lam said on Tuesday that, aside from last weekend’s ban on masks which provoked more protests, she had no immediate plans for more legislation or to invoke emergency powers.
But a source familiar with the government’s position said: “All options are on the table when the government ponders possible measures to curb violence.”
The source declined to comment on the possibility that emergency laws might be invoked to extend the 48-hour period of detention before an arrested person is charged.
The emergency laws give the chief executive the authority to “make any regulations whatsoever which he [or she] may consider desirable in the public interest” if she considers it an occasion of “emergency or public danger”.

The wide range of powers extends to the appropriation of property, censorship of media, arrests, detentions and deportations, and the power to enter and search premises.
Carrie Lam has ruled out police inquiry, so what can replace it?
Ivan Choy Chi-keung, a political scientist at Chinese University, said the Hong Kong government appears clueless as it does not seem to know whether to take a tough or moderate stance in the face of ongoing protests.
He felt that Lam’s plan to speak directly with Hongkongers to find a way to end the unrest was now in disarray. “Carrie Lam introduced the anti-mask law eight days after organising the community dialogue on September 26. I think it’s nearly impossible to launch another round of dialogues as the tension escalates,” he said.
Protesters: Can they pull back from the brink?
While Lam’s government appears unable to get a grip on solving the crisis, the same, ironically, can be said of the protesters on how to soldier on with their cause.
The level of violence they have employed has escalated to such an extent that ordinary Hongkongers now shrug off earlier events such as the storming of the Legislative Council building on July 1 as minor compared with the destruction seen in recent weeks.
Intriguingly, there appears to be have been some self-reflection within the seemingly leaderless movement. Hours after mobs trashed MTR stations and vandalised shops and banks with mainland links last Friday night in response to the anti-mask law, several posts popped up on the protesters’ virtual command centre, the Reddit-like site LIHKG, questioning the wisdom of such moves.
Can the protesters rein in the increasing violence? Photo: Sam Tsang
Can the protesters rein in the increasing violence? Photo: Sam Tsang
Share:
Someone soon offered new “guidelines”, reminding protesters to trash only businesses run by gangsters, as well as government offices and offices of pro-Beijing politicians. Shops and restaurants owned by Beijing-friendly businessmen should only be “decorated” with graffiti and “Lennon Walls” of colourful sticky notes bearing anti-government and pro-democracy messages.
What do Hong Kong protesters really want?
“We are largely fighting for democracy and freedom, but what we are doing now appears to be attacking those who are not with us,” a user wrote on LIHKG.
Another said: “Only dictators are intolerant of dissenting views. What’s the difference between the Communist Party and us, if we ‘renovate’ the stores just because their owners have a different point of view?”
Others called for the violence to be reduced to retain international support, particularly from the United States.
But others heaped scorn on such advice.
Anti-government protesters damage a branch of the China Construction Bank on October 5. Photo: Felix Wong
Anti-government protesters damage a branch of the China Construction Bank on October 5. Photo: Felix Wong
Share:
“It’s not a matter of having different political views now, but … those who are still supporting the police force are no longer human,” one said.
The notion of seeing the other side as less than human underscores how far the movement has strayed from its peaceful origins on June 9, when the main aim was to block the extradition bill.
The protesters are becoming aware though, that ordinary Hongkongers are affected by the trashing of MTR stations, ATMs, bank fronts and shops, the closure of supermarkets and convenience stores, and the disruption to daily life.
What’s the difference between the Communist Party and us, if we ‘renovate’ the stores just because their owners have a different point of view?
Post on LIHKG
Political scientists monitoring the protesters say there is a dynamic “collective restraint mechanism” within the movement, and that the radical pull back each time they realise they have gone too far.
“It is clear that the mechanism has been weakened,” said Lingnan University academic Samson Yuen Wai-hei, who has been doing field work during the protests.
“With the police force escalating its use of force and the government invoking emergency powers to implement the mask ban, it has become difficult for those peaceful demonstrators to restrain their peers.”
An anti-mask ban was brought into law on Saturday and brought protesters back to the streets. Photo: Reuters
An anti-mask ban was brought into law on Saturday and brought protesters back to the streets. Photo: Reuters
Share:
Yuen warned that the protesters’ new attitude of taking the law into their own hands could prove fatal to the movement if someone was killed by such vigilantism. Last Sunday, for example, the police hit out at brutal attacks on ordinary citizens after three cases of bloody fist fights.
“They are walking a very fine line,” Yuen said. “If someone dies, it will be impossible for peaceful protesters to advise their comrades in a friendly way – they will have to condemn them as they won’t want the movement to be associated with the incident.”
But Chinese University political scientist Dr Ma Ngok noted that protesters scaled down their actions on Monday and Tuesday, partly because frontline radicals had been arrested and others were reflecting on what they had done.

“One of the characteristics of this movement is that no one knows what types of protest will work and they keep coming up with different ideas, such as singing songs and forming human chains,” he said.

But he felt the movement had suffered a setback, noting the smaller crowds of protesters over the weekend. “Fewer people are now taking to the streets with their family members due to intimidation, as it has become a more dangerous activity,” he said.

The police force has banned most mass marches and rallies since late July and warned that anyone participating would be breaking the law. So there is a higher chance of protesters being arrested.

But Yuen expects that the movement will keep up its momentum, as people remain unhappy with the police force’s handling of protests.

He conceded however that recent developments have “made it difficult for supporters to backup the protesters confidently and righteously”.

A 17-year old student surnamed Yeung, who has been at the frontline of the protests, said she feared that moderate supporters would distance themselves from the movement following the latest incidents of vandalism.
But she remained confident of broad support from the public.

“I believe people will understand if we explain the reasons for our actions in our publicity materials, and show why the government should be blamed for all these inconveniences.”


Police: Can they restore law and order?

The police force has struggled to keep up with containing the protesters, often appearing to be losing the battle. There has also been an unrelenting campaign to portray the police as evil.

Unable to cope with protesters who engage in urban guerilla warfare, move from district to district to create chaos and attack officers in their buildings or on the streets, the police have found themselves stretched to the limit. Since the end of last month, some protesters have raised what they call the sixth demand – the disbandment of the Hong Kong police force.

Stephen Chiu Wing-kai, chair professor of sociology at the Education University, said it was unfortunate that the police had been used by the government to tackle political and governance issues.

“The image of the force has been improving since the 1970s but I can’t see the tension between it and a substantial number of residents being eased in the near future. It could take at least several years to mend fences.”

A senior police officer at management level stressed it was the force’s mission to safeguard the city’s law and order, and blamed online rumours and biased news reports for distorting its image.

“What have Hong Kong police done in the past four months, that other advanced countries’ police forces would not do when dealing with a riot, for example, the 2011 London riots and the 2018 yellow vests movement in France,” the insider said.
He called on people to compare the reported fatalities and injuries in those riots with the Hong Kong situation.

“What standards are these people referring to, when judging that police were using excessive force and abusing power? They cannot compare the way we handled a riot with a normal street crime.”

He pointed out that many netizens had been spreading online rumours and news to smear the force, but not many people or media had condemned the protesters’ violence. That, in turn, resulted in more violence, as rioters believed their behaviour was widely condoned.

The police source added that relations with the public might be in tatters, it was more urgent for the force to restore law and order as “people are taking the law into their own hands”.

“Even though our staff work up to 16 hours a day, seven days a week and are being sworn at every day, every officer is trying his utmost best to safeguard the city and maintain the force’s reputation as ‘Asia’s finest’,” he said.

While he declined to comment on the tactics used by police against protesters, he said members of the public could be doing more to help the police. He said many onlookers often challenged police or jeered at the officers when they were making arrests or conducting searches.

Four months since the start of the protests, Hong Kong has become familiar with intense violence, wanton destruction and a bitterly divided society, while more than 2,000 people have been arrested. Illustration: Adolfo ArranzFour months since the start of the protests, Hong Kong has become familiar with intense violence, wanton destruction and a bitterly divided society, while more than 2,000 people have been arrested. Illustration: Adolfo Arranz
Four months since the start of the protests, Hong Kong has become familiar with intense violence, wanton destruction and a bitterly divided society, while more than 2,000 people have been arrested. Illustration: Adolfo Arranz
All was peaceful when an estimated 1 million people took to the streets of Hong Kong on June 9 to protest against an extradition bill that would have allowed fugitives to be sent to mainland China, among other jurisdictions.
They marched for 7½ hours that day, without any incident. No window panes were broken. No bricks were hurled at police officers. No fires were set. No MTR stations were trashed.
Today, four months later, that event seems like a distant memory of a very different Hong Kong.
Since then, the city has experienced 18 consecutive weeks of increasingly violent protests, nearly all including clashes between masked, black-clad crowds and police.
The more radical among the protesters have blocked roads, set off fires, hurled petrol bombs, destroyed MTR stations and vandalised banks and restaurants regarded as having links with Beijing.
In separate incidents, protesters stormed the Legislative Council complex, and besieged the Beijing liaison office, pelting it with eggs, defacing the national emblem and spray-painting anti-Beijing expletives on its walls. Protests have disrupted flights at Hong Kong’s international airport and caused the MTR system to be shut down completely for the first time in 40 years.
Chief Executive Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor and her government have yet to produce a plan to quell the social unrest and get Hong Kong back to normal.
DON'T MISS CRITICAL EVENTS IN HONG KONG
Get our newsletter sent Monday to Friday
your email
SIGN UP
By registering, you agree to our T&C and Privacy Policy
The protesters made five demands: the withdrawal of the extradition bill, an independent inquiry into use of force by the police, amnesty for arrested protesters, a halt to describing the protests as riots, and the implementation of universal suffrage in Hong Kong.
Lam went so far as to suspend the unpopular bill, but it took three months before she finally gave in and announced that it would be formally withdrawn. Protesters responded with a new rallying call: “Five demands, not one less.”

Police said on Tuesday that 2,363 people have been arrested since June 9, with about half over the past month alone. Those arrested include 77 who disregarded the law banning masks, which came into force last Saturday.
With no end to the worsening violence, vandalism and disruption, observers have come round to saying that Hong Kong is now experiencing a new normal of social unrest that is not about to end any time soon.
A source close to the Hong Kong government said Beijing was unwilling to make concessions to the protesters’ remaining demands, particularly their call for political reform.
“Violence and skirmishes between police and protesters will continue and escalate possibly till the first half of next year,” the source said.

“Like it or not, this could become the ‘new normal’. Society, and even Beijing, may get used to this if things are confined to ‘weekend rituals’ and do not go really out of control. The Hong Kong government and police will not hesitate to arrest more protesters to scare off the outer layers of the anti-government movement.”
The source said the only realistic hope was that the government will be forced to set up a commission of inquiry after the Independent Police Complaints Council presents its report on the police action since June. It is due to be released by early January.
Beijing and the Hong Kong government: What is the strategy here?
For Beijing, the siege of its liaison office in the city on July 21 marked a turning point on how it viewed the protests. At the end of a peaceful march organised by the Civil Human Right Front, hundreds of radical protesters pelted the premises with eggs, defaced the national emblem and spray painted anti-Beijing expletives on the wall.

At the very start of the anti-government protests in June, Wang Zhimin, director of the liaison office, noted that most Hong Kong residents expressed their aspirations through peaceful and rational means and said this showed how civilised the city was.
All that has changed too.
Beijing has stressed that ending the chaos and violence is the top priority and it is leaving it to Lam’s embattled government to restore law and order. Its patience was also being tested, it indicated in its latest statement at the end of last week when it said “the current chaotic situation … cannot continue indefinitely”.

A mainland Chinese expert familiar with Hong Kong affairs warned that the small but persistent signs of separatism among some young protesters in the city were red flags.
“Hong Kong people must recognise the severity when many young people chant slogans like ‘Liberate Hong Kong, revolution of our times’,” said the expert, who declined to be named.
“Such slogans are unacceptable to the central government. If you look at the history of Tibet and Xinjiang, it is impossible to break Hong Kong away from the mainland.”
Hong Kong government wary of labelling protesters ‘terrorists’
Lam said on Tuesday that, aside from last weekend’s ban on masks which provoked more protests, she had no immediate plans for more legislation or to invoke emergency powers.
But a source familiar with the government’s position said: “All options are on the table when the government ponders possible measures to curb violence.”
The source declined to comment on the possibility that emergency laws might be invoked to extend the 48-hour period of detention before an arrested person is charged.
The emergency laws give the chief executive the authority to “make any regulations whatsoever which he [or she] may consider desirable in the public interest” if she considers it an occasion of “emergency or public danger”.

The wide range of powers extends to the appropriation of property, censorship of media, arrests, detentions and deportations, and the power to enter and search premises.
Carrie Lam has ruled out police inquiry, so what can replace it?
Ivan Choy Chi-keung, a political scientist at Chinese University, said the Hong Kong government appears clueless as it does not seem to know whether to take a tough or moderate stance in the face of ongoing protests.
He felt that Lam’s plan to speak directly with Hongkongers to find a way to end the unrest was now in disarray. “Carrie Lam introduced the anti-mask law eight days after organising the community dialogue on September 26. I think it’s nearly impossible to launch another round of dialogues as the tension escalates,” he said.
Protesters: Can they pull back from the brink?
While Lam’s government appears unable to get a grip on solving the crisis, the same, ironically, can be said of the protesters on how to soldier on with their cause.
The level of violence they have employed has escalated to such an extent that ordinary Hongkongers now shrug off earlier events such as the storming of the Legislative Council building on July 1 as minor compared with the destruction seen in recent weeks.
Intriguingly, there appears to be have been some self-reflection within the seemingly leaderless movement. Hours after mobs trashed MTR stations and vandalised shops and banks with mainland links last Friday night in response to the anti-mask law, several posts popped up on the protesters’ virtual command centre, the Reddit-like site LIHKG, questioning the wisdom of such moves.
Can the protesters rein in the increasing violence? Photo: Sam Tsang
Can the protesters rein in the increasing violence? Photo: Sam Tsang
Share:
Someone soon offered new “guidelines”, reminding protesters to trash only businesses run by gangsters, as well as government offices and offices of pro-Beijing politicians. Shops and restaurants owned by Beijing-friendly businessmen should only be “decorated” with graffiti and “Lennon Walls” of colourful sticky notes bearing anti-government and pro-democracy messages.
What do Hong Kong protesters really want?
“We are largely fighting for democracy and freedom, but what we are doing now appears to be attacking those who are not with us,” a user wrote on LIHKG.
Another said: “Only dictators are intolerant of dissenting views. What’s the difference between the Communist Party and us, if we ‘renovate’ the stores just because their owners have a different point of view?”
Others called for the violence to be reduced to retain international support, particularly from the United States.
But others heaped scorn on such advice.
Anti-government protesters damage a branch of the China Construction Bank on October 5. Photo: Felix Wong
Anti-government protesters damage a branch of the China Construction Bank on October 5. Photo: Felix Wong
Share:
“It’s not a matter of having different political views now, but … those who are still supporting the police force are no longer human,” one said.
The notion of seeing the other side as less than human underscores how far the movement has strayed from its peaceful origins on June 9, when the main aim was to block the extradition bill.
The protesters are becoming aware though, that ordinary Hongkongers are affected by the trashing of MTR stations, ATMs, bank fronts and shops, the closure of supermarkets and convenience stores, and the disruption to daily life.
What’s the difference between the Communist Party and us, if we ‘renovate’ the stores just because their owners have a different point of view?
Post on LIHKG
Political scientists monitoring the protesters say there is a dynamic “collective restraint mechanism” within the movement, and that the radical pull back each time they realise they have gone too far.
“It is clear that the mechanism has been weakened,” said Lingnan University academic Samson Yuen Wai-hei, who has been doing field work during the protests.
“With the police force escalating its use of force and the government invoking emergency powers to implement the mask ban, it has become difficult for those peaceful demonstrators to restrain their peers.”
An anti-mask ban was brought into law on Saturday and brought protesters back to the streets. Photo: Reuters
An anti-mask ban was brought into law on Saturday and brought protesters back to the streets. Photo: Reuters
Share:
Yuen warned that the protesters’ new attitude of taking the law into their own hands could prove fatal to the movement if someone was killed by such vigilantism. Last Sunday, for example, the police hit out at brutal attacks on ordinary citizens after three cases of bloody fist fights.
“They are walking a very fine line,” Yuen said. “If someone dies, it will be impossible for peaceful protesters to advise their comrades in a friendly way – they will have to condemn them as they won’t want the movement to be associated with the incident.”
But Chinese University political scientist Dr Ma Ngok noted that protesters scaled down their actions on Monday and Tuesday, partly because frontline radicals had been arrested and others were reflecting on what they had done.

“One of the characteristics of this movement is that no one knows what types of protest will work and they keep coming up with different ideas, such as singing songs and forming human chains,” he said.
But he felt the movement had suffered a setback, noting the smaller crowds of protesters over the weekend. “Fewer people are now taking to the streets with their family members due to intimidation, as it has become a more dangerous activity,” he said.
The police force has banned most mass marches and rallies since late July and warned that anyone participating would be breaking the law. So there is a higher chance of protesters being arrested.
But Yuen expects that the movement will keep up its momentum, as people remain unhappy with the police force’s handling of protests.
Fewer people are now taking to the streets with their family members due to intimidation, as it has become a more dangerous activity
Dr Ma Ngok, Chinese University
He conceded however that recent developments have “made it difficult for supporters to backup the protesters confidently and righteously”.
A 17-year old student surnamed Yeung, who has been at the frontline of the protests, said she feared that moderate supporters would distance themselves from the movement following the latest incidents of vandalism.
But she remained confident of broad support from the public.
“I believe people will understand if we explain the reasons for our actions in our publicity materials, and show why the government should be blamed for all these inconveniences.”
Police: Can they restore law and order?
The police force has struggled to keep up with containing the protesters, often appearing to be losing the battle. There has also been an unrelenting campaign to portray the police as evil.
Unable to cope with protesters who engage in urban guerilla warfare, move from district to district to create chaos and attack officers in their buildings or on the streets, the police have found themselves stretched to the limit. Since the end of last month, some protesters have raised what they call the sixth demand – the disbandment of the Hong Kong police force.
Why Hong Kong protesters view police as the enemy
Stephen Chiu Wing-kai, chair professor of sociology at the Education University, said it was unfortunate that the police had been used by the government to tackle political and governance issues.
“The image of the force has been improving since the 1970s but I can’t see the tension between it and a substantial number of residents being eased in the near future. It could take at least several years to mend fences.”

A senior police officer at management level stressed it was the force’s mission to safeguard the city’s law and order, and blamed online rumours and biased news reports for distorting its image.
“What have Hong Kong police done in the past four months, that other advanced countries’ police forces would not do when dealing with a riot, for example, the 2011 London riots and the 2018 yellow vests movement in France,” the insider said.
He called on people to compare the reported fatalities and injuries in those riots with the Hong Kong situation.
How Hong Kong’s police are holding city back from the brink
“What standards are these people referring to, when judging that police were using excessive force and abusing power? They cannot compare the way we handled a riot with a normal street crime.”
He pointed out that many netizens had been spreading online rumours and news to smear the force, but not many people or media had condemned the protesters’ violence. That, in turn, resulted in more violence, as rioters believed their behaviour was widely condoned.

The police source added that relations with the public might be in tatters, it was more urgent for the force to restore law and order as “people are taking the law into their own hands”.
“Even though our staff work up to 16 hours a day, seven days a week and are being sworn at every day, every officer is trying his utmost best to safeguard the city and maintain the force’s reputation as ‘Asia’s finest’,” he said.
While he declined to comment on the tactics used by police against protesters, he said members of the public could be doing more to help the police. He said many onlookers often challenged police or jeered at the officers when they were making arrests or conducting searches.

“If the citizens don’t do it any more, the officers can concentrate on dealing with the rioters,” he said.
He said the force was confident about handling any unrest and had been working to show the world that the accusations against it were unfounded.

Another senior officer told international media last month that the force had been pushed to the limit by the ongoing political crisis.

“If it escalates any more, we will be eating into other areas of policing,” he warned. Four months on, none of the three key players – neither the government, nor the protesters nor the police – are any the wiser on when and how it will all end. What is evident though is all sides are running ragged. And the Hong Kong of four months ago seemed a more innocent time.
Newsletter

Related Articles

Saudi Press
0:00
0:00
Close
The Great Western Exit: Why Best Citizens Are Fleeing the Rich World [PODCAST]
The New Robber Barons of Intelligence: Are AI Bosses More Powerful Than Rockefeller?
The AI Gold Rush Is Coming for America’s Last Open Spaces [Podcast]
The Pentagon’s AI Squeeze: Eight Tech Giants Get In, Anthropic Gets Shut Out [Podcast]
The War Map: Professor Jiang’s Dark Theory of Iran, Trump, China, Russia, Israel, and the Coming Global Shock [Podcast]
AI Isn’t Stealing Your Job. It’s Dismantling It Piece by Piece.
Kennedy’s Quiet War on Antidepressants Sparks Alarm Across America’s Medical Establishment
Russian Oligarch’s Superyacht Crosses Hormuz via Iran-Controlled Route
Crypto Scammers Capitalize on Maritime Chaos Near the Strait of Hormuz: A Rising Threat to Shipping Companies
Changi Airport: How Singapore Engineered the World’s Most Efficient Travel Experience
News Roundup
Microsoft lost 2.5 millions users (French government) to Linux
Strategic Saudi-Bahrain Causeway Closed Amid Security Concerns as Trump Deadline Approaches
Saudi Arabia Keeps Red Sea Oil Exports Flowing Despite Regional Tensions
Pipeline Attack Cuts Significant Share of Saudi Arabia’s Oil Export Capacity
Saudi Business Leader Abudawood Appointed Chairman of Merit Incentives Group
TotalEnergies Confirms Damage at Saudi Refinery Following Security Incident
Saudi Arabia Launches Early Construction Phase for King Salman Stadium Project
Saudi Shift Away from Longstanding Dollar Oil Framework Gains Attention Amid Iran Conflict
Türkiye and Saudi Arabia Resolve Long-Running Transit Visa Dispute
Saudi Oil Capacity and Pipeline Flows Reduced as Supply Risks Intensify
TotalEnergies Reports Damage to Saudi SATORP Refinery Following Security Incidents
Gulf States Assess Prospects of U.S.-Iran Truce as Regional Stability Efforts Intensify
South Korea Resumes Honey Exports to Saudi Arabia Following Sanitary Approval
Saudi Arabia Carries Out Sentences in Eastern Province Following Security Convictions
Saudi Sovereign Wealth Fund Backs King Street’s Regional Credit Strategy
Saudi Arabia Secures World Cup Return as Egypt Celebrates Landmark Qualification
Iran and Saudi Arabia Intensify Diplomatic Engagement Amid Regional Tensions
Russia and Saudi Arabia Open Visa-Free Travel Corridor for Citizens
Saudi Oil Output Capacity Reduced by 600,000 Barrels Per Day Amid Regional Conflict
Saudi Arabia Suspends Operations at Select Energy Sites as Precautionary Measure
Saudi Arabia Halts Operations at Multiple Energy Facilities Amid Heightened Tensions
Global Markets Jolt as Iran Signals Ceasefire Breakdown and Rising Regional Tensions
King Street Aligns with Saudi Sovereign Wealth Fund to Expand Alternative Investments in Middle East
Attack on Saudi Arabia’s Jubail Petrochemical Hub Raises Global Supply Concerns
Debate Emerges Over Saudi Strategic Decisions as Gulf Cooperation Council Dynamics Come Into Focus
Saudi Arabia Expands Full Workforce Localisation to 69 Professions in Major Labour Reform
Emerging Alliance of Pakistan, Turkey, Egypt and Saudi Arabia Signals New Regional Power Dynamic Amid Iran Conflict
Iran Linked to Strikes Across Gulf States Following Refinery Attack Escalation
Saudi Arabia Voices Concern Over Fragile US–Iran Ceasefire Stability
Starmer Warns Sustained Effort Needed to Ensure US–Iran Ceasefire Holds
Saudi Arabia’s Key East-West Oil Pipeline Targeted Following Ceasefire Announcement
Iran Targets Saudi Arabia’s East-West Oil Pipeline in Escalating Regional Tensions
Trump Warns of Civilizational Stakes as Iran Halts Negotiations
Saudi Companies Expand Remote Work Measures Ahead of Iran-Related Security Concerns
Iran Warns of Strikes on Saudi Energy Infrastructure if US Targets Its Facilities
Iran Urges Civilians to Form Human Shields Around Nuclear Sites as Diplomatic Deadline Approaches
Saudi Arabia Raises Oil Prices to Record Premiums Amid Supply Pressures Linked to Iran Conflict
Key Saudi-Bahrain Causeway Closed Amid Heightened Security Concerns Linked to Iran
Formula One Calendar Gap Explained as Fans Await Next Grand Prix
×