Cops, protesters clash again in HK
Riot police and protesters in Hong Kong fought brief skirmishes near the Chinese border yesterday, the latest clashes during huge pro-democracy protests that have battered the financial hub for more than three months.
Police fired tear gas and rubber bullets at small groups of hardcore activists who had built barricades in the outlying town of Tuen Mun, some of them lobbing bricks and at least one Molotov cocktail.
Multiple protesters were seen being arrested in the clashes, which were less sustained than the intense battles of previous weekends.
The city has been convulsed by months of huge, sometimes violent rallies calling for greater democratic freedoms and police accountability.
Yesterday's clashes were the 16th straight weekend of protests and skirmishes.
In a now familiar pattern, the day began with a peaceful rally through Tuen Mun, a town in Hong Kong's northwest, close to the border with mainland China.
At one point, a handful of protesters pulled down China's flag flying outside a local government office and burned it.
Tensions soon spiked after police snatch squads rushed into a park where crowds had gathered and made a series of arrests.
Hundreds of hardcore activists then built barricades and dismantled nearby fences to arm themselves with makeshift clubs. Objects were also thrown onto nearby train tracks.
But protesters showed little appetite in holding ground, quickly retreating as soon as tear gas and rubber bullets were fired by police.
By Saturday evening, pockets of demonstrators and police were playing a familiar game of cat and mouse.
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