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Beijing Won’t Let Hong Kong Unrest Go On, State Media Warns

The Hong Kong and Macau Affairs Office of the State Council said that the central government backs the police and judicial system.

Beijing Won’t Let Hong Kong Unrest Go On, State Media Warns
Demonstrators gather on Gloucester Road to block traffic during a protest in the Causeway Bay district of Hong Kong, China. (Photographer: Justin Chin/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- China’s central government won’t sit by and let the disruption in Hong Kong go on, according a commentary by the Xinhua News Agency, which condemned the violence that’s wracked the financial hub for weeks and took aim at protesters whom it said tossed a Chinese national flag into the harbor.

“We must warn all the ugly forces that try to challenge the central authority and undermine the bottom line of the ‘one country, two systems’ principle,” the news agency said on Sunday. It added: “The central government will not sit idly by and let this situation continue,” while reiterating that it’s sticking to the one country, two systems regime.

The Hong Kong and Macau Affairs Office of the State Council said on Sunday that the central government supports the Hong Kong police and judicial system, and trusts they will act decisively to deal with "extremists" in the city who have desecrated the national flag. Those acts are criminal violations that call for severe punishment by law, it said in a statement.

The unrest is Hong Kong is growing, with fresh violence at the weekend amid four days of planned rallies. Police used tear gas in parts of the Kowloon district on Saturday night to try to disperse crowds and re-open blocked roads. The Hong Kong government said the protests go “way beyond the boundary of freedom of expression in a civilized society,” while noting that some protesters were suspected to have deliberately damaged the national flag.

The flag is a symbol of the country, so the act was a public trampling on the country’s dignity and an insult to all Chinese nationals, including Hong Kong residents, Xinhua said. Maintaining the dignity of the flag is to safeguard the dignity of the country, the nation and the entire Chinese people, it said.

To contact Bloomberg News staff for this story: Winnie Zhu in Shanghai at wzhu4@bloomberg.net;Qi Ding in Shanghai at qding15@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Shamim Adam at sadam2@bloomberg.net, Magdalene Fung, Jake Lloyd-Smith

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With assistance from Bloomberg