Eng

Riot police to guard all polling stations in protest-hit Hong Kong for first time – but will maintain ‘minimum presence’ to avoid sowing fear among voters in district council elections

South China Morning Post
發布於 2019年11月22日03:11 • Christy Leung and Kimmy Chung
  • Force will be on 'maximum reserve' mode to thwart any disruptions or violence
  • Almost all officers in the 31,000-strong force have to report for duty on election day on Sunday, according to senior police source
Police officers in riot control gear will stand guard at more than 600 polling stations across Hong Kong on Sunday. Photo: Dickson Lee

As Hong Kong gears up for a key election on Sunday amid the city's ongoing protest crisis, all polling stations will be guarded by armed officers in riot gear for the first time in the history of local polls, the Post has learned.

The police force will be on "maximum reserve" mode to thwart any disruptions or violence but maintain a "minimum presence" to avoid sowing fear among voters as they cast their ballots at the more than 600 polling stations for the district council elections.

廣告(請繼續閱讀本文)

A senior police source said that to enable such tight security, almost all officers in the 31,000-strong force, regardless of which division they are attached to, have to report for duty on election day, with 3,000 riot control officers and crime investigators on standby.

"On top of security guards, there are also armed police officers in riot control uniform and gear in every polling station. District officers will patrol their own area and handle any disturbance first," the source said.

Another source said plain-clothes officers would be equipped with anti-stab vests and anti-slash neck protectors, in the wake of a series of attacks on police.

廣告(請繼續閱讀本文)
Plain-clothes officers will be equipped with anti-stab vests and anti-slash neck protectors. Photo: Handout

He stressed, however, that to avoid voters worrying, the force's presence around polling stations would be minimised but with enough officers on standby in the vicinity.

Alongside the security preparations, a number of candidates contesting the 452 seats up for grabs are also taking additional precautions such as blurring their supporters' pictures on their social media accounts, not going out too late at night to canvass for support and keeping gatherings low-key.

廣告(請繼續閱讀本文)

Police sergeant slashed in face with razor during arrest of suspect in Hong Kong

Both camps across the political divide held campaign rallies on Thursday to drum up support for Sunday, with the pro-establishment bloc scaling back its campaign to avoid the attention of anti-government protesters.

The polls, held in the midst of the protest crisis now in its sixth month, will effectively be a referendum on the government and its allies and will have knock-on effects on the legislative elections next year, which draw candidates from among successful district councillors.

Anger against the government and police could erode the dominance of the pro-establishment side and mean more seats for the pan-democratic camp and galvanise the protest movement further.

China's top leadership has urged the government to hold the elections as scheduled despite the ongoing unrest and the uphill battle facing the government's allies, also dubbed the pro-Beijing camp, as the Post earlier reported.

On Thursday, Chief Secretary Matthew Cheung Kin-chung reiterated the government's determination to hold the elections in a fair and orderly manner

The Electoral Affairs Commission also announced earlier this week it would hire extra security guards and move four polling stations away from universities after some of the campuses became intense battlefields between protesters and police.

The city's largest pro-establishment party, the Democratic Alliance for the Betterment and Progress of Hong Kong, which is fielding 179 candidates for the 452 seats, held a campaign rally on Thursday morning, calling for "freedom and reason".

Compared to its previous rallies, the event was a more muted gathering of mainly candidates, party veterans and core supporters, but not the bigger group of pro-Beijingers from the National People's Congress and the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference.

"It was on a smaller scale, as we are wary of 'attacks' from protesters," a party management official said. "We quickly wrapped it up in 30 minutes as there were messages in the Telegram channels that protesters might come over."

But in the half-hour, DAB chief Starry Lee Wai-king and some candidates kicked black soccer balls, to symbolise the throwing out of black-clad protesters. The "black force" needed to be kicked out to rid the city of violence and allow people to express their views freely and to go back to work and school, Lee said.

Concerns high as Carrie Lam vows elections will be held on time

To protect the supporters who attended the rally from being doxxed, some later candidates covered their faces in the photos before posting them on their social media accounts.

Lawmaker Michael Luk Chung-hung, of the pro-Beijing Federation of Trade Unions, said the party turned such a rally into a closed-door event, as an internal gathering to mobilise volunteers amid heightened security fears. The councillor in the Tin Heng constituency of Yuen Long district said many party colleagues had cut back on campaigning in the streets at night and relied more on phone calls to win over voters.

He is facing challenges from Wong Pak-yu, Chan Ka-chun and Stanley Chan Chi-shing.

Seats in 452 constituencies are up for grabs in Sunday's district council elections. Photo: Felix Wong

With their offices vandalised and supporters harassed, the camp has complained that the elections are unfairly stacked against them.

The pro-establishment camp has taken a beating in its support after it was seen as flip-flopping over the now-withdrawn extradition bill which would have allowed the transfer of fugitives to mainland China. It had supported the government on the bill, and then backed down in the face of overwhelming opposition, upsetting its own support base and further alienating other residents it was trying to court.

During the protest crisis, politicians on both sides have become targets. Outspoken pro-Beijing lawmaker Junius Ho Kwan-yiu was attacked by a knife-wielding man when he was campaigning, while several pan-democrats including Jimmy Sham Tsz-kit were assaulted on the streets.

Ho is running against Lo Chun-yu and Chiang Ching-man in Tuen Mun, while Sham is up against incumbent Michael Wong Yue-hon in Sha Tin.

Hong Kong's protest crisis has entered its sixth month. Photo: Sam Tsang

The pro-democracy camp, which is staging its most ambitious campaign yet by sending candidates to all 452 constituencies, held a joint campaign rally on Thursday, chanting "five demands, let's vote as a referendum" " echoing the "five demands, not one less" slogan used during the ongoing demonstrations by protesters on what they want the government to do.

Democratic Party chairman Wu Chi-wai dismissed the complaints raised by the camp's opponents, as he said several pan-democrats had also been assaulted and had their banners vandalised.

"We call for restraint from all sides as this election carries enormous significance, as it will demonstrate how the public assesses the government amid the protests," he said.

Copyright (c) 2019. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

查看原始文章

更多 Eng 相關文章

China reports annual average of 21 mln new drivers over last two decades
XINHUA
China donates 425 sewing machines, 250 hatching machines to Tanzanian women entrepreneurs
XINHUA
Hong Kong holds firework show to celebrate Labor Day
XINHUA
Xinhua News | Death toll up to 48 after road collapse in south China's Guangdong
XINHUA
Update: Death toll up to 48 after road collapse in south China's Guangdong
XINHUA
Over 1,000 arrested so far in protests on U.S. college campuses nationwide
XINHUA
"Fire Sculpture": The beauty of Boshan Colored Glaze Blowtorch Craft
XINHUA
/C O R R E C T I O N -- UAS Pharmaceuticals/
PR Newswire (美通社)
Vacant homes in Japan hit record 9 mln
XINHUA
Update: Death toll rises to 36 after road collapse in south China's Guangdong
XINHUA
NEC APAC appoints new President and CEO
PR Newswire (美通社)
Culture&Life | A skilled expert restores cultural relics at Sanxingdui Ruins site in SW China's Sichuan
XINHUA
Everything to know about this year’s Met Gala, from the theme to the hosts and expected guests
Tatler Hong Kong
Language AI company Fano Labs fuels APAC expansion with its Series B funding round led by Openspace Ventures with participation from HSBC and Greater Good Investment
PR Newswire (美通社)
Update: Xi directs rescue operation, safety overhaul following fatal road collapse in south China
XINHUA
ReThink HK 2024 returns with expanded sustainability focus
PR Newswire (美通社)
Aerial views of high-altitude rhododendrons in China's Yunnan
XINHUA
"S+ Summit cum Expo" 2024: Together We Co-create a Sustainable Society
PR Newswire (美通社)
On site in Gaza: Locals suffering from hunger after months of conflict
XINHUA
Huawei Unveils New Offerings for Commercial and Distribution Markets to Drive Intelligent Growth of SMEs
PR Newswire (美通社)
GLOBALink | Chinese doctor helps improve neonatal care in Papua New Guinea
XINHUA
Uganda urges Britain to stop meddling in domestic affairs
XINHUA
Embark on a culinary journey through the flavors of Japan at Kyoto Joe
Tatler Hong Kong