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Thoughts - HongKong Police
Mar 12, 2020 03:41:41   #
Canuckus Deploracus Loc: North of the wall
 
HK police defend 'vilified' reputation
CHINADAILY

The deputy chief of Hong Kong police on Monday told a United Nations Human Rights Council conference that Asia's finest have been "vilified" by r****rs using violence to pursue their political agendas.

In a direct effort to clear the name of the much-maligned law enforcement agency, the deputy commissioner of the Hong Kong Police Force, Oscar Kwok Yam-shu, set out to establish the "t***h" in Geneva of what has happened in Hong Kong over the past eight months.

Hong Kong has been held hostage by r**ting mobs with their brand of activism characterized by intolerance and violence, their trademark response to any disagreement, Kwok told a room of international representatives in response to a comment made by a non-governmental organization.

R****rs had relentlessly accused police of brutality to vilify police and impede their actions, he said. Police were the only force that physically stood in the way of those who sought to extort their demands from the government through mob violence, he added.

Mobs have vandalized shops, banks, restaurants, train stations and traffic lights, set fires to buildings, attacked police officers with bricks, gasoline bombs and even genuine firearms, he said. They viciously assaulted innocent citizens who opposed them, even proudly showing the attacks online to intimidate people, he noted.

"This was the nature of the horrible menace that faced innocent Hong Kong citizens," said Kwok, after listing acts of violence committed by protesters, including setting a man who confronted them on fire, and hurling bricks at, and eventually k*****g, a 70-year-old cleaner who videoed their actions.

As of Dec 10, a total of 6,022 people were arrested during the often-violent protests against the now-withdrawn extradition law amendments.

The vandalism of public property has cost the public coffers over HK$65 million (US$8.4 million) in repairs. As of December, 740 sets of traffic lights had been damaged, 52.8 kilometers of metal railings along walkways dismantled, and about 218 hectares of paving blocks on footpaths removed.

As of November, 147 of the city's 161 metro stations had been reportedly vandalized, causing damage worth as much as HK$500 million for repairs or replacements.

Hong Kong police have had the unenviable task of preserving innocent citizens' rights and freedoms, which were no less worthy of protection than those claimed by the protesters, said Kwok.

He refuted statements by some r****rs, who claimed that "breaking the law to achieve their goals was a noble cause".

"Whether the cause is altruistic or in fact self-serving is completely irrelevant to us," said Kwok.

The police's one and only mission is to find out whether anyone has committed a crime; and it was then the police's lawful duty to stop criminals and arrest them, he said.

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Mar 12, 2020 12:12:15   #
Kevyn
 
Canuckus Deploracus wrote:
HK police defend 'vilified' reputation
CHINADAILY

The deputy chief of Hong Kong police on Monday told a United Nations Human Rights Council conference that Asia's finest have been "vilified" by r****rs using violence to pursue their political agendas.

In a direct effort to clear the name of the much-maligned law enforcement agency, the deputy commissioner of the Hong Kong Police Force, Oscar Kwok Yam-shu, set out to establish the "t***h" in Geneva of what has happened in Hong Kong over the past eight months.

Hong Kong has been held hostage by r**ting mobs with their brand of activism characterized by intolerance and violence, their trademark response to any disagreement, Kwok told a room of international representatives in response to a comment made by a non-governmental organization.

R****rs had relentlessly accused police of brutality to vilify police and impede their actions, he said. Police were the only force that physically stood in the way of those who sought to extort their demands from the government through mob violence, he added.

Mobs have vandalized shops, banks, restaurants, train stations and traffic lights, set fires to buildings, attacked police officers with bricks, gasoline bombs and even genuine firearms, he said. They viciously assaulted innocent citizens who opposed them, even proudly showing the attacks online to intimidate people, he noted.

"This was the nature of the horrible menace that faced innocent Hong Kong citizens," said Kwok, after listing acts of violence committed by protesters, including setting a man who confronted them on fire, and hurling bricks at, and eventually k*****g, a 70-year-old cleaner who videoed their actions.

As of Dec 10, a total of 6,022 people were arrested during the often-violent protests against the now-withdrawn extradition law amendments.

The vandalism of public property has cost the public coffers over HK$65 million (US$8.4 million) in repairs. As of December, 740 sets of traffic lights had been damaged, 52.8 kilometers of metal railings along walkways dismantled, and about 218 hectares of paving blocks on footpaths removed.

As of November, 147 of the city's 161 metro stations had been reportedly vandalized, causing damage worth as much as HK$500 million for repairs or replacements.

Hong Kong police have had the unenviable task of preserving innocent citizens' rights and freedoms, which were no less worthy of protection than those claimed by the protesters, said Kwok.

He refuted statements by some r****rs, who claimed that "breaking the law to achieve their goals was a noble cause".

"Whether the cause is altruistic or in fact self-serving is completely irrelevant to us," said Kwok.

The police's one and only mission is to find out whether anyone has committed a crime; and it was then the police's lawful duty to stop criminals and arrest them, he said.
HK police defend 'vilified' reputation br CHINADAI... (show quote)


There are two reasons that people as a whole obey the law, the first is that they see it as just, giving them a voice and protecting them. The second and a far second is fear of reprisal for not doing so. The bottom line is that millions of people in Hong Kong do not agree with being ruled by the Dictatorship in Beijing and no longer accept the rule of law of a government that oppresses them. To quibble over broken fixtures in the subway is pointless. There are two paths forward. Beijing allows the one nation two system autonomy they promised and stop dictating who rules Hong Kong or they crack down ruthlessly with the military and lose face and all they have accomplished as the place burns.

Reply
Mar 12, 2020 21:13:16   #
Canuckus Deploracus Loc: North of the wall
 
Kevyn wrote:
There are two reasons that people as a whole obey the law, the first is that they see it as just, giving them a voice and protecting them. The second and a far second is fear of reprisal for not doing so. The bottom line is that millions of people in Hong Kong do not agree with being ruled by the Dictatorship in Beijing and no longer accept the rule of law of a government that oppresses them. To quibble over broken fixtures in the subway is pointless. There are two paths forward. Beijing allows the one nation two system autonomy they promised and stop dictating who rules Hong Kong or they crack down ruthlessly with the military and lose face and all they have accomplished as the place burns.
There are two reasons that people as a whole obey ... (show quote)


Which policies has Beijing dictated in Hong Kong?

Indeed, what interference has there been?

Please be specific... Thanks...

The part about obeying laws I agree with...

There is something third way forward... And it appears to be happening...

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