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2016 | OriginalPaper | Chapter

7. Policing the Occupy Central Movement in Hong Kong

Author : Sonny Shiu-Hing Lo

Published in: The Politics of Policing in Greater China

Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan US

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Abstract

The police reacted to the Occupy Central Movement (OCM) from September to December 2014 strategically, swiftly and adaptively, combining soft-line with hard-line measures. Objectively speaking, the police became a political sandwich between the OCM supporters and the anti-OCM activists, between the Hong Kong government and protestors and between Beijing and the pro-democracy Hongkongers. As long as none of the Hong Kong people died in the OCM, the police operation could be viewed as successful and peaceful. In anticipation of the occurrence of the OCM, the police training and preparation for the OCM turned out to be useful and significant. Although there were accusations of police-triads linkage, these claims had no evidence. The complexities among triads and the OCM meant that Hong Kong remained highly politically pluralistic but fragmented. Yet, the fragmentation among triad forces made it difficult for some members of the public to discern the important role of the police force, which acted as the defender of the law and order and which stood above all the vested interests in the society. On the other hand, the fragmentation among pro-democracy protestors facilitated the work of the police to maintain social order, for opinion and ideological differences within the pan-democratic camp meant that the OCM was destined to be short-lived, chaotically organized and subject to the changing public opinion. Public opinion was unfavorable to the police at the inception of the OCM, but the chaotic leadership in the OCM and the fragmented nature of pan-democrats later facilitated the transformation of public opinion in support of the police. Radical localists who attacked the Legislative Council building turned out to be the ones discrediting the entire OCM, which was at the early beginning hijacked by the relatively more hard-line student activists. Overall, the wait-out strategy adopted by the Hong Kong government in dealing with the OCM became very successful. The police adopted a wait-and-see attitude until the collapse of the OCM leadership, especially when the court injunctions were granted to the bailiffs in clearing the protest sites in Mongkok and Admiralty.

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Footnotes
1
Ming Pao, September 27, 2016, pp. A1–A2. Also see Apple Daily, September 28, 2016, pp. A1–A2.
 
2
Apple Daily, September 28, 2014,pp. A1–A16.
 
3
Ibid., p. 5.
 
4
Ibid., September 29, 2016, pp. A1–A6.
 
5
Lo, Hong Kong’s Indigenous Democracy, p. 116.
 
6
Ibid., September 30, 2014, p. A5.
 
7
Ibid., October 31, 2014, p. A2.
 
8
Ibid., September 30, 2016, p. A5.
 
9
Ibid.
 
10
Ibid.
 
11
Ibid., October 9, 2014, p. A6.
 
12
Ibid., October 16, 2014, p. A1.
 
13
Ibid., October 16, 2014, p. A2.
 
14
Ibid., November 29, 2014, p. A3.
 
15
Ibid., October 15, 2014, p. A2.
 
16
Ibid.
 
17
Ibid., November 7, 2014, p. A4.
 
18
Wen Wei Po, October 26, 2014, p. A2.
 
19
Headline News, October 30, 2014, p. 1.
 
20
Ibid., October 20, 2014, p. 1.
 
21
Ibid., October 27, 2014, p. 1.
 
22
Apple Daily, November 19, 2014, p. A2.
 
23
Wen Wei Po, November 20, 2014, p. A4.
 
24
Ibid., November 20, 2014, p. A2.
 
25
Ibid., November 20, 2014, p. A2.
 
26
Apple Daily, November 21, 2014, p. A1.
 
27
Ibid., November 19, 2014, p. A6.
 
28
Ibid.
 
29
Ibid., November 19, 2014, p. A2.
 
30
Wen Wei Po, November 17, 2014, p. A5.
 
31
Sing Tao Daily, November 17, 2014, p. A3.
 
32
Apple Daily, November 17, 2014, p. A4.
 
33
Wen Wei Po, November 24, 2014, p. A5.
 
34
Ibid.
 
35
Apple Daily, November 17, 2014, p. A5.
 
36
Wen Wei Po, November 25, 2014, p. A2.
 
37
Samuel Chan, Emily Tsang and Danny Lee, “Police ‘jet pack’ solution more powerful than pepper spray or tear gas, says Post photographer hit by all three,” South China Morning Post, November 27, 2014.
 
38
Wen Wei Po, December 1, 2014, p. A4. The City-State Faction was led by Lingnan University professor Horace Chin Wan who advocated that Hong Kong should be a city-state with “high degree of autonomy.” The Movement Expelling Locusts was and is led by Leung Kam-shing, a Hong Kong resident who resists the entry of too many mainland tourists into the HKSAR. He also led supporters to Sheung Shui to protest against the parallel traders there. The Vendetta Mask Organization was a group of young anarchists who vows to oppose the government, and who use confrontational tactics to deal with the police.
 
39
Ibid., December 1, 2014, p. A5.
 
40
Ibid.
 
41
Tony Cheung and Timmy Sung, “Police Let Occupy Founders Walk Away,” South China Morning Post, December 4, 2014, p. A1.
 
42
Joyce Nip, Chris Lau and Stuart Lau, “Occupy at a crossroads,” South China Morning Post, December 4, 2014, p. A4.
 
43
Wen Wei Po, December 12, 2014, p. A2.
 
44
Ibid.
 
45
Apple Daily, October 4, 2014, p. A2.
 
46
Ibid.
 
47
Ibid.
 
48
Ibid., October 4, 2014, p. A3.
 
49
Ibid.
 
50
Ibid., October 5, 2014, p. A2.
 
51
Ibid.
 
52
Ibid.
 
53
Ibid.
 
54
Ibid., p. A3.
 
55
Ibid., October 7, 2014, p. A1.
 
56
Ibid.
 
57
Ibid.
 
58
Ibid.
 
59
Ibid., p. A3.
 
60
Ibid., November 18, 2014, p. A2.
 
61
Ibid.
 
62
Ibid., November 27, 2014, p. A7.
 
63
Ibid.
 
64
Ibid.
 
65
Ibid.
 
66
Wen Wei Po, October 20, 2014, p. A2.
 
67
Ibid.
 
68
Ibid., November 7, 2014, p. A2.
 
69
Ibid.
 
70
Ibid., November 24, 2014, p. A2.
 
71
Ibid.
 
72
Headline News, October 13, 2014, p. 1.
 
73
Ibid.
 
74
Ibid.
 
75
Ibid.
 
76
Lana Lam and Clifford Lo, “I’ve no regrets about the tear gas, says top police officer who ordered its use,” South China Morning Post, October 5, 2014.
 
77
Ibid.
 
78
Ibid.
 
79
Wen Wei Po, September 29, 2014. P. A2.
 
80
Ibid.
 
81
Oriental Daily News, October 4, 2014, p. A5.
 
82
Headline News, October 4, 2014, p. 1.
 
83
Oriental Daily News, October 4, 2014, p. A2.
 
84
Ibid., October 5, 2014, p. A5.
 
85
Ibid., p. A6.
 
86
Sunday Morning Post, October 19, 2014, p. 1
 
87
Apple Daily, October 19, 2014, p. A2.
 
88
Ibid.
 
89
Ibid., October 19, 2014, p. A4.
 
90
Ibid.
 
91
Ibid.
 
92
Headline News, October 15, 2014, p. 1.
 
93
Kenneth Lau, Jasmine Siu, Hilary Wong and Kevin Cheng, “Tunnel Chaos as Protestors Sprayed,” The Standard, October 15, 2–14, p. 1.
 
94
Apple Daily, October 13, 2014, p. A4.
 
95
Oriental Daily News, October 18, 2014, pp. A1–A2.
 
96
Ibid., October 23, 2014, p. A2.
 
97
Ibid., October 23, 2014, p. A6.
 
98
Ibid.
 
99
Ibid.
 
100
Apple Daily, November 26, 2014, p. A1.
 
101
Ibid., December 1, 2014, p. A5.
 
102
Wen Wei Po, November 27, 2014, p. A4.
 
103
Ibid.
 
104
Ibid., p. A5. Also see Apple Daily, November 27, 2014, p. A5; and Headline News, November 27, 2014, p. 2.
 
105
Hong Kong Economic Times, November 28, 2014, p. A36.
 
106
Apple Daily, November 29, 2014, p. A2.
 
107
Ta Kung Pao, November 29, 2014, p. A1.
 
108
Ibid.
 
109
Apple Daily, December 1, 2014, p. A1.
 
110
Ibid., p. A2.
 
111
Ibid., December 7, 2014, p. A4.
 
112
Ibid.
 
113
Ibid.
 
114
Ibid., December 10, 2014, p. A4.
 
Metadata
Title
Policing the Occupy Central Movement in Hong Kong
Author
Sonny Shiu-Hing Lo
Copyright Year
2016
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-39070-7_7