An air of tired resignation hung over Hong Kong’s main pro-democracy protest site yesterday as demonstrators braced for a police clearance after more than two months of rallies — but new posters said: “We’ll be back.”
Police plan to clear the protest camp in Admiralty today, opening traffic once more on a multi-lane highway through the heart of the business district that has become home to tents, supply stations and artwork by student-led protesters calling for fully free leadership elections.
Authorities have asked protesters to retreat and have said they would take “resolute action” against those who resist in what they say is a bid to restore public order.
Photo: Reuters
Student leaders have also been encouraging non-violence.
“We will not call for a new round of occupying, we’ll wait and see what the government will do to meet public opinion,” Hong Kong Federation of Students leader Alex Chow (周永康) said.
Beijing said that candidates for the 2017 chief executive election would have to be vetted by a loyalist committee, in what protesters have dismissed as “fake democracy.”
New art around the Admiralty site, which has become a creative hub during the protests, made clear the movement was not over.
“Sweeping away the barricades cannot sweep away public opinion. The body is down, but the determination is not. We will be back,” read one poster, showing a picture of Arnold Schwarzenegger in the film Terminator.
Another “We will be back” poster was draped across the road and the slogan was created in gold balloons near the main speakers’ stage.
In trademark humor for the occupied site, an alien doll wearing goggles and a yellow cape was tied to a sign-post with a shield that read: “Whoever clears me out will be afflicted with stubborn disease until death.”
Bailiffs were scheduled to start implementing injunction orders from 9am today to clear parts of the site before police dismantle the rest, authorities said. Tens of thousands of people rallied at Admiralty at the height of the protests, but public support for the road blockages has waned as the weeks have worn on.
Protesters told of their sadness at the lack of political concessions from Hong Kong or Beijing, who branded the demonstrations illegal.
“To be honest, we failed this time. Having slept on the street for two months, we haven’t achieved anything,” said Karen Ho, a 28-year-old theater worker. “But at least we saw how ugly and ridiculous our government can be.”
Others said they were still determined to prove their point.
“I will sit here and let them carry me away,” said Lucas Wong, 23, a computer repair worker.
“We need to show police we are here, not just tents,” he said, adding that he would bring a helmet and shield to defend himself.
There are fears that radical splinter groups will dig in for a final stand in the wake of violent clashes outside government headquarters at the end of last month.
That prompted the leaders of the Occupy Central campaign group to hand themselves in to police in a bid to get the protests off the streets.
“It’s difficult to guarantee no clashes will arise... I especially call on parents and teachers to persuade them [students] not to come back to the occupy area in Admiralty,” Hong Kong Chief Secretary Carrie Lam (林鄭月娥) said yesterday.
However, protester Vincent Man, 26, said he just wanted to stay safe.
“I know that some people will resist the police — but I would rather not get injured and arrested,” he said.
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