- Updated
- World
- Asia
- Hong Kong protests
This was published 5 years ago
Students escorted out of Polytechnic university as siege continues
By Kirsty Needham
Hong Kong: Around 50 school students were escorted out of the Polytechnic university siege by school headmasters, which continued as petrol bombs and tear gas exploded on the streets of Kowloon on Monday night in clashes between protesters and police.
As fears grew about how the university siege would end, former Legislative Council president Jasper Tsang, a prominent conservative politician, was allowed into the campus to talk to students. Around 100 protesters left, including 50 aged under 16 years, escorted by teachers.
A deal - between headmasters and police - saw the youngest children avoid immediate arrest but police were to take their details. Students older than 16 years were arrested and taken to police stations.
Protesters who remained inside said they were scared of being beaten by police if they left, after protesters who emerged from the building on Monday were tackled to the ground and had weapons pointed at them.
In the streets of Jordan and Tsim Sha Tsui, petrol bombs exploded as people responded to a call to come onto the streets and attempt to reach the university.
Police responded with heavy use of tear gas and two water cannons, which suffered tyre damage from road debris set by protesters.
Earlier, police allowed Red Cross medics inside a university to treat the injured hours after parts of the campus caught fire when riot police stormed protester barricades on Monday morning, firing rubber bullets.
Police enforced a cordon around Polytechnic university and made arrests of anyone caught in the vicinity of the campus as the siege continued.
On Monday evening, large numbers of protesters came out onto the streets of nearby Tsim Sha Shui to “Save Polytechnic”.
A daring escape was made from the campus by protesters who shimmied down a rope from a footbridge next to the university at night.
The protesters had to lower themselves about 10 metres onto the road below, and were met with a hail of projectiles fired by police as they descended. They were sped away by a convoy of rescuers on motorbikes. Some of the motorcycles were waiting for them, while others sped to the scene.
Not everyone seems to have got away. Some of the motorbikes were later seen abandoned on the road and a number of protesters appeared to have been arrested.
Earlier, a group of protesters who rushed out of the campus were tackled to the ground and subdued by riot police who also raised weapons at them. Police continued to fire tear gas into the campus.
Police said 400 people had been arrested at the Polytechnic campus.
The High Court, meanwhile, struck down a controversial mask ban that had been introduced under emergency law and police said they would stop making arrests of people in masks.
Parents and school principals urged police to allow the hundreds of student protesters still holed up inside the Polytechnic university on Monday afternoon to leave safely, but police declared the campus had become a "battlefield for criminals and rioters".
"Surrender is the only viable option," said a police spokesman. Yet tear gas was fired at students trying to leave.
The vice chancellor of the university Teng Jin-guang told police he wanted to accompany arrested students to the police station.
Security minister John Lee said protesters in the campus should “leave as soon as possible” as chemicals inside risked exploding.
The government would send a team of social workers and psychologists inside the campus to locate children and accompany them out to bring them to the police station.
He said if protesters surrendered at points designated by the police they could come out peacefully.
A group of 20 protesters who fled Polytechnic along train tracks were rounded up by police and put on a train. Social workers were also arrested when they tried to leave.
Riot police clashed with protesters in multiple locations across Hong Kong on Monday as demonstrators reacted angrily to the scenes at Polytechnic. The government warned that District Council elections due in six days may be postponed if the violent scenes continued.
The protesters at Polytechnic had barricaded themselves inside the campus at the weekend, stockpiling weapons in preparation for a police intervention.
The police moved on Sunday, and retook the roads on three sides of the university, but faced fierce resistance from protesters who hurled petrol bombs at a water cannon and armoured vehicle.
Riot police moved in before dawn, firing rubber bullets and tear gas to clear protesters off the road and make arrests. Students fled inside the heavily fortified campus. Police said they had made arrests near the entrances but then withdrew.
Police had earlier warned they may use live bullets.
Booms and cracks filled the air as petrol bombs and tear gas canisters exploded and set fire to trees when police moved in before dawn on Monday morning. Fire quickly spread up the staircase of the Polytechnic University's main entrance.
Police tackled protesters to the ground on the road outside the campus and dragged them away. But more than 500 protesters remained in the multi-storey Polytechnic building on Monday.
At least one pro-democracy politician was arrested trying to enter the Polytechnic campus, which police seemed determined to isolate.
"I didn't sleep last night. I watched the live footage from midnight until 6am, then I caught the first bus here," said Jane, 26, in tears and among a large group of people that gathered in a nearby square at Tsim Sha Tsui - outside of the police cordon.
She was waiting to hear news of her friends inside the Polytechnic campus.
A violent confrontation
Throughout the siege, protesters with umbrellas and petrol bombs had held back the police water cannon, which repeatedly sprayed liquid laced with pepper spray, on a road in front of a People's Liberation Army barracks.
But protesters appeared caught by surprise when riot police stormed the fortified university campus before dawn on Monday, rushing behind protester lines and firing tear gas and rubber bullets from rifles.
But when they finally charged the riot police came from a different direction and out of range of a catapult students had deployed inside the university.
After the attack the police retreated but a large fire appeared to rage inside the university building where many protesters had fled.
As the road outside the university sat empty after the special forces police withdrew, explosions could be heard and seen inside the university building where protesters remained.
Protesters had piled flammable material and gas and petrol bombs inside as an arsenal.
After daybreak, rubber bullet casings and spent gas canisters lay on the road in front of the university entrance.
A pair of goggles sat in a pool of blood where they had been abandoned.
Police had been seen dragging protesters away from the university after grabbing them near its entrance.
Many of the volunteer medics who would usually assist injured protesters had been arrested by police earlier as they tried to leave the campus.
With Reuters