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Hong Kong students defy China warnings with boycott
By AFP - Sep 02,2019 - Last updated at Sep 02,2019
Students attend a school boycott rally at the Chinese University of Hong Kong on September 2, in the latest opposition to a planned extradition law that has since morphed into a wider call for democratic rights in the semi-autonomous city (AFP photo)
HONG KONG — Thousands of black-clad students rallied on Monday at the start of a two-week boycott of university classes, piling pressure on Hong Kong's leaders to resolve months of increasingly violent anti-government protests that show no sign of easing.
Students have been the backbone of a movement that sprang up to oppose government plans to allow extraditions to China but has morphed into wider protests against the Beijing-backed territory's unelected leadership.
Hundreds have been arrested in violent clashes with police, and an increasingly shrill Beijing has labelled protesters "terrorists", with an editorial by China's state news agency on Sunday warning "the end is coming".
Hong Kong enjoys freedoms unseen on the Chinese mainland under the "one country, two systems" policy inherited in the handover from Britain in 1997, but locals fear those rights are being eroded.
On Monday, as universities reopened after the summer break, thousands of students boycotted classes and gathered instead in central Hong Kong.
"Today is the first day of school, but I still want to come out," a 19-year-old university student named Tommy told AFP.
"I don't think we will miss anything. This is also a form of learning."
Earlier on Monday a call for a general strike went largely unheeded, but riot police patrolled some subway stations after protesters briefly disrupted services during rush hour by preventing the train doors from closing.
Elsewhere, secondary pupils formed human chains at schools and nurses carrying pro-democracy placards lined hospital corridors in flash protests to show their support for the anti-government movement.
"Hong Kong is our home... we are the future of the city and have to take up responsibility to save it," said a 17-year-old secondary school student who gave her surname as Wong.
Worst violence in decades
One nurse suggested the protest is doomed because China will never concede.
"But we still have to stand and say something. At least we have shown the world what is happening," she told AFP, requesting anonymity.
Over the weekend, the city witnessed some of the worst civic violence in decades as protesters lobbed bricks and petrol bombs at police, who responded with tear gas, water cannon and baton charges.
On Sunday, at least a dozen flights were cancelled after protesters blocked routes to the airport, although police fended off demonstrators' efforts to converge on the terminal itself.
On Saturday, hardcore protesters rampaged through the city centre, setting fires and throwing petrol bombs at riot police in defiance of a rally ban.
Video footage captured by local media showed police charge and beat a crowd cowering inside a train carriage, with Amnesty International calling their actions "horrifying".
The images have fortified anger against the police, who protesters accuse of brutality.
Hong Kong's Security Minister described the violence as "on the verge of being out of control".
"I call on the general public to reject violence, keep our society in order and safeguard the rule of law," John Lee Ka-chiu told reporters.
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