Watch: In Hong Kong pro-democracy protesters were beaten up by unidentified men in white shirts
Suspected to be triad gangsters, the men in white shirts attacked both protestors and passersby at a metro station with wooden sticks and iron rods.
the situation in hongkong now is so messy...... i hope bnm reconsiders sending ab6ix to hongkong... it’s so dangerous pic.twitter.com/hptD9TIDnd
— 𝐠𝐞𝐧 ♡ 𝐝𝐚𝐧𝐢𝐞𝐥 (@ilyjeojang) July 22, 2019
A third round of protests against the now-suspended extradition bill in Hong Kong turned violent on Sunday night after protestors were beaten up by a group of people dressed in white shirts – suspected to be triad gangsters.
In an assault concentrated around a metro station at the Yuen Long suburb, the white-shirts assaulted pro-democracy protesters and passersby at a train station.
This is a clip from Gwyneth Ho (@StandNewsHK)'s live video. Look at how vehement and vicious the white-shirts are in their attacks on protesters. Look at their matching weapons – their long wooden sticks & umbrellas. #antielab #YuenLong
— Jun Pang (@hyjpang) July 21, 2019
(https://t.co/YLjoOljcQC) pic.twitter.com/QucaHWJWdS
Footage circulating on social media show the men beating protestors with wooden sticks and metal rods.
Over 45 protestors were injured, and one critically injured, according to numbers from BBC.
Yet another pic from tonight's thuggish attack in Yuen Long. Anybody wearing black (the usual colour for #antiELAB protestors) was a prime target. #HongKongProtest #HongKong pic.twitter.com/oztOfxFAuz
— Wilson Leung 梁允信 (@WilsonLeungWS) July 21, 2019
The pro-democracy protestors, who had turned up in black, were especially easy to spot.
#Breaking: Some shocking video footage of a Female journalists being beaten by multiple of these hired pro Chinese TRIAD government criminals dressed in white in #HongKong of tonight. #extraditionbill pic.twitter.com/mpU2ocWYrb
— Sotiri Dimpinoudis (@sotiridi) July 21, 2019
According to a South China Morning Post report, the assaulters fled before the police arrived. Questions are now being raised about why the police took so long to reach the scene.
Wide allegations of the police covering for the triad mob are rampant on social media. “#HongKong become a police state,” wrote a person on social media. “#police enforce their power by deploying triad members (white shirts).”
citizens in Yuen Long are failed to contact police @lookner #HongKong #YuenLong pic.twitter.com/Eb15e2vJ0N
— FreeHongKong (@dllmdllm2019) July 21, 2019
#Update: These hired thugs of men in white have no decency! They even hit a pregnant women and she fell to the ground because of passing out, and she has been taken care off by local medics in the protest in a #HongKong subway. #extraditionbill pic.twitter.com/hFEAdrfCuz
— Sotiri Dimpinoudis (@sotiridi) July 21, 2019
Posts of this kind, explaining one view of what happened on Sunday night, have now flooded social media.
So angry 😠#HongKong pic.twitter.com/jpPVZNVSlb
— jun leung (@junandjay) July 22, 2019
Earlier in the day, close to 430,000 people had assembled to protest against the extradition bill, said the organisers, the Civil Human Rights Front. The extradition bill, though suspended, has now come to represent a broader erosion of Hong Kong’s freedoms by Beijing.
Some protesters pelted eggs, others spray-painted the front of the Beijing liaison office in #HongKong after the third major march against the #extraditionbill. https://t.co/y21oE4z7dC pic.twitter.com/1WEt5pv6bq
— SCMP News (@SCMPNews) July 22, 2019
While the first few hours of the protest went planned, late in the evening several black-clad activists, some masked, defied police orders and marched to the Beijing Liaison Office. They threw eggs at and spray-painted the front of the office to voice their dissent.
In response, the riot police fired several rounds of rubber bullets and teargas at protesters, reportedly without warning.
Protests turned violent in #HongKong as thousands hit the streets to oppose the now-suspended extradition bill and demand the departure of Chief Executive Carrie Lam pic.twitter.com/jEPUJoFbEY
— RT (@RT_com) July 22, 2019