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Hong Kong Police Deny Saturday Protest Permit After Violence

Hong Kong Police Deny Permit for Saturday Protest After Violence

(Bloomberg) -- Hong Kong police refused permission for a Saturday protest scheduled to take place in the same area that saw unidentified groups of men attack demonstrators, even as its organizer said he would go ahead with the rally planned to condemn the violence.

Saturday’s march was organized after a group of mysterious, white-shirted men attacked black-shirted protesters at Yuen Long train station in a city suburb on July 21 as they returned from taking part in a protest of more than 100,000 people earlier that day. Other passengers and journalists were also injured.

Police later arrested 12 men for illegal assembly, including nine suspected of links to the city’s notorious organized crime syndicates, known as triads, Anthony Tsang, Acting Regional Commander for New Territories North said on Thursday. Footage of stick-wielding assailants running amok in the station -- as well as complaints that police on the scene did little to stop them -- have shocked Hong Kong.

The permit for the Saturday protest was denied because the roads in Yuen Long are too narrow to accommodate a large number of demonstrators, and local leaders as well as university heads have expressed concerns over public safety, Tsang said.

“There’s a high chance of clashes and violence as we have seen some threats online,” Tsang said in a press conference on Thursday. Without a permit, anyone coming out to protest would in theory be breaking the law, while any arrest would depend on the situation at the moment, he added.

Protest organizer Max Chung, who applied for the permit, told reporters he couldn’t “comprehend” the rejection.

“I will go ahead and march even if it’s just by myself this Saturday,” he said after the protest was denied. “For now, I will not ask others to join me,” he added, before going on to give journalists details about the march route.

If Saturday’s march proceeds, it would mark the eighth-straight weekend of protests in the former British colony as embattled Chief Executive Carrie Lam and her government reel from the city’s biggest political crisis since its return to Chinese rule in 1997. Mass protests sparked by opposition to legislation that would allow extraditions to the mainland have widened to include widespread calls for Lam’s resignation and an investigation into police abuses against demonstrators.

To contact the reporters on this story: Iain Marlow in Hong Kong at imarlow1@bloomberg.net;Fion Li in Hong Kong at fli59@bloomberg.net;Stephen Tan in Hong Kong at ztan39@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Brendan Scott at bscott66@bloomberg.net, Karen Leigh, David Watkins

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