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Demonstrators carry umbrellas as they march along a street in Hong Kong today. Vincent Yu/AP/Press Association Images

Hundreds of thousands attend another huge protest in Hong Kong

Weeks of demonstrations have plunged the city into crisis.

HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS of pro-democracy activists flooded the streets of Hong Kong today amid increasingly stark warnings from Beijing.

Protesters marched through the city, defying torrential rain and a police order not to march from a park where they had gathered earlier for a rally.

Weeks of demonstrations have plunged the financial hub into crisis, with protesters and police coming to blows on numerous occasions. 

Today’s event was largely peaceful. 

The organisers of the demonstration, the Civil Human Rights Front, said more than 1.7 million people attended. However, the police estimated that 128,000 people were present.  

“It’s been a long day and we’re very tired, but to see so many people out in the rain marching for Hong Kong gives strength to everyone,” Danny Tam, a 28-year-old graphic designer, said. 

The unprecedented political crisis was sparked by opposition to a plan to allow extraditions to the Chinese mainland. But protests have since morphed into a wider call for democratic rights in the semi-autonomous city.

Anger has been sharpened by the perceived heavy-handedness of the police who have used tear gas, baton charges and rubber bullets against protesters.  

“The police are doing things that are totally unacceptable,” said Yim, who like many of the protesters gave only one name.

They are hurting citizens, they aren’t protecting us.

Communist Party-ruled mainland China has taken an increasingly hardline tone towards the protesters, decrying the “terrorist-like” actions of a violent hardcore minority among the demonstrators.

Despite the near-nightly clashes with police, the movement has won few concessions from Beijing or the city’s unelected leadership.

The spiralling violence, which last week saw protesters paralyse the city’s airport, has tarnished a campaign that had taken pride in its peaceful intent and unpredictability — which demonstrators have tagged with the slogan ‘Be Water’.

Peace or violence? 

Many protesters today carried rucksacks stuffed with paraphernalia such as laser pens, gas masks, goggles and helmets.

“We have our gear with us, but we hope not to use it,” said a 30-year-old identifying himself only as Man.

Late into the evening hundreds of masked protesters milled outside the government headquarters shouting, ‘Reclaim Hong Kong, revolution of our times.’

China’s propaganda apparatus has seized on the unrest, with state media churning out a deluge of damning articles, pictures and videos.

State media also ran images of military personnel and armoured personnel carriers across the border in Shenzhen, prompting the United States to warn Beijing against sending in troops.

Analysts say any intervention by Chinese security forces would be a reputational and economic disaster for China.

But Hong Kong’s police are under intense pressure, stretched by flash mob protests.

A Hong Kong government spokesperson praised the police for handling “illegal acts with tolerance” and appealed to the protesters to “express their views in a peaceful and rational manner”.

Opinions among the protesters have diverged over the billowing violence, which has seen a small group of hardcore protesters using rocks, Molotov cocktails and slingshots against the police.

Some say the violence has driven the pro-democracy movement in an uncomfortable direction.

“There are some expressing extreme views,” rally-goer Ray Cheng, 30, told AFP.

“But we have tried many times with peaceful approaches … I really hope the government can listen to us.”

Unprecedented crisis 

Under a deal signed with Britain, authoritarian China agreed to allow Hong Kong to keep its unique freedoms when it was handed back in 1997.

But many Hong Kongers feel those freedoms are being chipped away, especially since China’s hardline president Xi Jinping came to power.

Beyond suspending the extradition bill, Beijing and city leader Carrie Lam have shown no desire to meet key demands such as an inquiry into police violence, the complete withdrawal of the bill, and an amnesty.

Beijing has turned the screws on Hong Kong’s businesses, pressuring them to toe the line and condemn the protesters.

On Friday, Cathay Pacific announced the shock resignation of CEO Rupert Hogg after the carrier was excoriated by Beijing because some staff supported the pro-democracy protests.

© AFP 2019  

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    Mute Sean O'Dhubhghaill
    Favourite Sean O'Dhubhghaill
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    Jan 9th 2024, 10:32 AM

    Is there any logical reason why farming and eating dog should be illegal? The animals we normally eat (cow, sheep, goat, etc) tend to be herbivores, so are easier to farm and taste different than carnivores. But beyond that, surely if we can humanely farm and eat species X, we should be allowed to eat species Y if it is also farmed in a humane manner?

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    Mute damien leen
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    Jan 9th 2024, 10:49 AM

    @Sean O’Dhubhghaill: How many pet cows do you have? Do you take your goat for a walk everyday.
    Whilst there may be some validity to your argument I think you’ll find the overwhelming majority of people actually see their pet dogs as something more, even part of the family. So the prospect of chowing down on Lassie is not very appealing to most.

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    Mute Tom Dillon
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    Jan 9th 2024, 12:21 PM

    @damien leen: I don’t think Koreans were eating their pet dogs though.

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    Mute Clare Power
    Favourite Clare Power
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    Jan 9th 2024, 2:12 PM

    @Sean O’Dhubhghaill: have you seen the way they’re killed, thrown alive into a pot of boiling water…r u ok with that!

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    Mute Larry Betts
    Favourite Larry Betts
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    Jan 9th 2024, 2:24 PM

    @Clare Power: Hot dogs? Mmmmm,I love ‘em

    17
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    Mute Clare Power
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    Jan 9th 2024, 3:41 PM

    @Larry Betts: stop Larry, yr supposed to be the funny man here

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    Mute Pete Murray
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    Jan 9th 2024, 4:09 PM

    @Clare Power: boohoo

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    Mute damien leen
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    Jan 9th 2024, 4:15 PM

    @Tom Dillon: oh that’s alrite then… C’mon man!

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    Mute Larry Betts
    Favourite Larry Betts
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    Jan 9th 2024, 7:01 PM

    @Clare Power: I hope the EU doesn’t now ban German Shepherd Pie

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    Mute Clare Power
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    Jan 9th 2024, 7:35 PM

    @Larry Betts: I said your supposed to be funny Larry!!

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    Mute Larry Betts
    Favourite Larry Betts
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    Jan 9th 2024, 8:26 PM

    @Clare Power: I’m never again going to ask for a doggie bag whenever I’m in a restaurant.

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    Mute Clare Power
    Favourite Clare Power
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    Jan 9th 2024, 2:15 PM

    I’ve no time for people that haven’t empathy for animals, there’s something missing in their soul…my opinion…

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    Mute Fidelma Clarke
    Favourite Fidelma Clarke
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    Jan 9th 2024, 11:54 AM

    About time

    41
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    Mute William Tallon
    Favourite William Tallon
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    Jan 9th 2024, 12:20 PM

    No more wokking the dog, as it were…

    39
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    Mute F Fitzgerald
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    Jan 9th 2024, 2:21 PM

    Well done, South Korea.

    30
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    Mute damien leen
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    Jan 9th 2024, 10:45 AM

    Lassie ain’t coming home!

    26
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    Mute Larry Betts
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    Jan 9th 2024, 2:20 PM

    For those who can’t now eat dog,they will feast on tasty Not Poodles

    23
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    Mute Coc Caled
    Favourite Coc Caled
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    Jan 9th 2024, 11:05 AM

    Koreans have swapped dogs for babies. The population has gone through the floor. By the way dog stew or boshintang is delicious – a little like a spicy lamb stew. Why should people be forced to abandon their own foid culture? Westerners complain about migrants swamping their own culture while imposing their values and culture on Asian, African and other indigenous cultures. No one who supports the banning of dog meat in Korea should oppose the imposition of Sharia in Ireland.

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    Mute Marcus Connolly
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    Jan 9th 2024, 11:24 AM

    Personally, I think it’s barking mad decision by the government.
    Banning dog meat will only lead farmers to go underground with their business.
    Instead of a regulated price for the meat, meat prices could fetch a higher price due to the ban from the dog meat ban.

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    Mute Jb Walshe
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    Jan 9th 2024, 1:43 PM

    Anyone for a Chinese ?

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    Mute Larry Betts
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    Jan 9th 2024, 7:03 PM

    @Jb Walshe: It’s only now that I realise what the Indians put in a madras curry,omg

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    Mute Padraig O'Brien
    Favourite Padraig O'Brien
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    Jan 9th 2024, 12:44 PM

    The way some people anthromorphosise dogs, and cats, is beyond ridiculous. If some people want to eat dogs then let them.

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    Mute Tom Dillon
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    Jan 9th 2024, 12:27 PM

    Wokery. Wok wokery.

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    Mute Jane Alford
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    Jan 10th 2024, 7:16 AM

    It’s not the eating I have a problem with, it’s the way they are “prepared”, the wire binding the limbs and mouth, the tape to stop them screaming , it’s the skinning alive, the boiling alive, the torture to promote the myth that the meat tastes better. I, for one, am extremely happy with the ban, it should be immediate, not in 3 years. It’s not just farmed dogs, it’s the stolen pets too that are affected.

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    Mute Coc Caled
    Favourite Coc Caled
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    Jan 9th 2024, 11:06 AM

    Foid=food

    5
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