Tear gas as Hong Kong protesters don Halloween masks

Chaos has once again erupted in Hong Kong after protesters donning Halloween masks took to the streets in a latest wave of anti-government demonstrations. 

Police reportedly fired multiple rounds of tear gas in Central and Mong Kok after activists gathered to renew their demands for democratic reforms and condemn what they view as police violence. 

Footage shows riot officers tackling one female protester dressed as Disney character Maleficent after she told them to pepper-spray ‘my beautiful a***’ on a packed street near the city’s party street. 

The clashes came as US senators today introduced a new bill to combat what they call ‘Beijing’s steady erosion of Hong Kongers’ basic liberties’ – a move that will put more pressure on already strained China-US relations. 

 

People wearing masks gather on a street in Hong Kong today after defying an emergency law ban on face coverings

Riot police move to disperse protesters after firing tear gas during a Halloween rally in the city's party district Lan Kwai Fong

Riot police move to disperse protesters after firing tear gas during a Halloween rally in the city’s party district Lan Kwai Fong

Riot police wait to take actions after unleashing tear gas to disperse protesters during a Halloween rally in Lan Kwai Fong

Riot police wait to take actions after unleashing tear gas to disperse protesters during a Halloween rally in Lan Kwai Fong

Anti-government protesters walk on a street filled with tear gas during a march on Halloween outside Mong Kok police station

Anti-government protesters walk on a street filled with tear gas during a march on Halloween outside Mong Kok police station

An anti-government protester with her face painted as the Joker shouts slogans towards the Mong Kok police station today

An anti-government protester with her face painted as the Joker shouts slogans towards the Mong Kok police station today

Democracy activists donned Halloween masks lampooning the city’s pro-Beijing leaders on Thursday, defying an emergency law that bans face coverings and sparking renewed clashes with police.

Online forums used to organise the largely leaderless movement encouraged supporters to wear Halloween-themed masks as police warned they would force revellers to remove outfits and facepaint if they engaged in protests.

Small flashmob rallies broke out in multiple locations on Thursday evening.

A person displays a message on a mobile phone in front of a line of policemen in Lan Kwai Fong during a Halloween march

A person displays a message on a mobile phone in front of a line of policemen in Lan Kwai Fong during a Halloween march

A line of policemen stand in Lan Kwai Fong, the city's main party district, as people celebrate Halloween in Hong Kong

A line of policemen stand in Lan Kwai Fong, the city’s main party district, as people celebrate Halloween in Hong Kong

A man wearing a mask of Chinese President Xi Jinping stands with peole wearing Guy Fawkes masks on a street in Hong Kong

A man wearing a mask of Chinese President Xi Jinping stands with peole wearing Guy Fawkes masks on a street in Hong Kong

Policemen stopped some mask-wearing Halloween revellers from entering the Lan Kwai Fong clubbing area in Hong Kong

Policemen stopped some mask-wearing Halloween revellers from entering the Lan Kwai Fong clubbing area in Hong Kong

The new protests come as official figures released Thursday showed the city has plunged into a technical recession for the first time since the global financial crisis over a decade ago.

At Victoria Park, around a hundred protesters gathered for an unsanctioned march to a popular nightclub district that had been surrounded by riot police.

Many wore outfits poking fun at the city’s leadership.

Yan Lee, an accountant in her 50s, wore a mask that combined the face of justice secretary Theresa Cheng with the Disney villain Maleficent.

‘For months she has done nothing for Hong Kong but defend the authorities,’ she told AFP.

A person dressed as US President Donald Trump waves an American flag as they stand on a street in Hong Kong today

A person dressed as US President Donald Trump waves an American flag as they stand on a street in Hong Kong today

People in Guy Fawkes masks gather on a street in Hong Kong in defiance of a ban on face masks launched earlier this month

People in Guy Fawkes masks gather on a street in Hong Kong in defiance of a ban on face masks launched earlier this month

A man with his face painted as Joker stands in front of anti-riot officers on a street in Hong Kong during a Halloween rally

A man with his face painted as Joker stands in front of anti-riot officers on a street in Hong Kong during a Halloween rally

A picture of Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam is attached to the clothing of a protester during a Halloween rally

A picture of Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam is attached to the clothing of a protester during a Halloween rally

Another protester, who gave her surname as Loo, had painted her face in the style of Batman’s nemesis, The Joker.

She said she was inspired by the recent Hollywood film that traces The Joker’s origin story as he launches a revolution against Gotham City’s elites.

‘The idea that everyone owns the spirit to fight touched me a lot,’ she said.

Across the harbour in Prince Edward district, the protests had a more familiar and less satirical feel, with police firing tear gas and chasing hardcore protesters who had taken over roads.

Activists were marking two months since police were filmed beating protesters in Prince Edward subway station, one of multiple incidents this summer that have fanned hostility towards the force.

People in Guy Fawkes masks raise their hands as they gather on a street in Hong Kong during a rally to renew their demands

People in Guy Fawkes masks raise their hands as they gather on a street in Hong Kong during a rally to renew their demands

An injured man is give first aid during a Halloween march in Hong Kong. Police have reported fired tear gas in multiple areas

An injured man is give first aid during a Halloween march in Hong Kong. Police have reported fired tear gas in multiple areas

The new waves of clashes come as official figures released today showed the city has plunged into a technical recession

The new waves of clashes come as official figures released today showed the city has plunged into a technical recession

A woman is detained by police during a Halloween rally in Lan Kwai Fong, a bar district in Central in Hong Kong, today

A woman is detained by police during a Halloween rally in Lan Kwai Fong, a bar district in Central in Hong Kong, today

A women covers her face from avoid tear gas fired by the police as protesters wearing costumes march on Halloween

A women covers her face from avoid tear gas fired by the police as protesters wearing costumes march on Halloween

Hong Kong has been upended by nearly five months of huge, often violent, pro-democracy protests in which participants routinely use masks to hide their identities and protect themselves from tear gas and pepper spray.

Earlier this month city leader Carrie Lam invoked colonial-era legislation for the first time in more than fifty years to outlaw face coverings at rallies.

The move was seen as a watershed legal moment for the city since its 1997 return by Britain to China — but the ban has done little to stop the protests or dissuade people from wearing masks.

Police released a video on Facebook warning protesters not to use Halloween as an excuse to hold rallies, and vowed to arrest people who refused to remove their masks when requested to do so.

Earlier on Thursday, activists went to court to challenge the emergency law.

‘This is a duel between the rule of law and totalitarianism,’ lawmaker Dennis Kwok told reporters outside the High Court at the start of a two-day hearing.

People shout slogans in front of a line of policemen in the Lan Kwai Fong area during Halloween in Hong Kong today

People shout slogans in front of a line of policemen in the Lan Kwai Fong area during Halloween in Hong Kong today

A Halloween reveller walks past a line of policemen during an anti-government rally in the Lan Kwai Fong area in Hong Kong

A Halloween reveller walks past a line of policemen during an anti-government rally in the Lan Kwai Fong area in Hong Kong

Anti-government protesters wearing costumes march during Halloween near the Mong Kok police station in Hong Kong

Anti-government protesters wearing costumes march during Halloween near the Mong Kok police station in Hong Kong

The sweeping 1922 emergency law was passed by then colonial master Britain to deal with striking workers and allows the city’s leader to make ‘any regulations whatsoever’ in a time of emergency or public danger.

It was last used in 1967 by the British to help suppress Maoist-backed leftist riots that raged for nearly a year and killed some 50 people.

Lam’s use of the law was controversial because it bypassed the Legislative Council, the partially-elected chamber that approves Hong Kong’s laws.

Critics said the move undermined the city’s reputation for being a dependable business and legal hub at a time of growing concern over Beijing’s control of the city.

The protests were initially sparked by a now-abandoned plan to allow extraditions to the authoritarian mainland. But they snowballed into a wider democracy and police accountability movement.

Increasingly violent clashes have broken out between hardcore protesters throwing petrol bombs and bricks at police who are responding with ever increasing amounts of tear gas and rubber bullets.

The clashes have hammered the city’s once-solid reputation for stability and has further battered an economy that was already reeling from the US-China trade war.

Lam and Beijing have shown little appetite to meet protester demands, or to offer a political solution.

Instead they have opted to wait out a movement that has remained stubbornly resilient and appears to maintain significant public support despite the economic hardship.

On Thursday evening China’s Communist Party elite concluded a key meeting in Beijing with a promise to protect the ‘stability’ of Hong Kong without giving concrete details.

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