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The Hong Kong Occupy Central Protests

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The Hong Kong Occupy Central Protests

On the streets with the democracy protestors in Hong Kong.

The Hong Kong Occupy Central Protests

Before the pepper spray and tear gas, the police cordon off traffic and direct people away from the protests, later shutting down transport to the protest site, including the MTR and trolleys.

Credit: Phoebe Gluyas
The Hong Kong Occupy Central Protests

Protesters cover themselves in garbage bags, cling film, and plastic bags to resist the hours of pain brought on by pepper spray.

Credit: Phoebe Gluyas
The Hong Kong Occupy Central Protests

Despite police force, protesters successfully occupy the street.

Credit: Tyler Roney
The Hong Kong Occupy Central Protests

The police left their vehicles in their retreat and protesters took revenge for the tear gas and pepper spray with spray paint. Others simply let the air out of the tires so that the police would not be able to reclaim them

Credit: Tyler Roney
The Hong Kong Occupy Central Protests

Early in the protest, reporters and protesters took to the relatively safe front lines. The umbrellas are to protect activists from the pepper spray.

Credit: Phoebe Gluyas
The Hong Kong Occupy Central Protests

From this, protesters can clearly be seen occupying the main road well out of sight as reporters use the higher ground and safety of the walkway to file their stories.

Credit: Tyler Roney
The Hong Kong Occupy Central Protests

Police guard an entrance close to Admiralty

Credit: Phoebe Gluyas
The Hong Kong Occupy Central Protests

Central government signs vandalized near the heart of the protest, a leftover from the previous evening’s student protests.

Credit: Phoebe Gluyas
The Hong Kong Occupy Central Protests

Blocks away from the main protest, activists block police vans from entering the street with shouts of “disgrace” and cheers when the vehicles reverse and retreat.

Credit: Tyler Roney
The Hong Kong Occupy Central Protests

A young student stomps his feet and groans with the pain from the pepper spray as another calmly breathes beside him, still chanting with the crowd.

Credit: Tyler Roney
The Hong Kong Occupy Central Protests

Protesters see to a man hit with pepper spray at Wanchai station.

Credit: Tyler Roney
The Hong Kong Occupy Central Protests

Hundreds of yellow ribbons, a symbol of the protest, are tied to a gate guarding Tamar

Credit: Phoebe Gluyas

We arrived at the Hong Kong Occupy protests during the peaceful yet tense hours of midday, where police were putting up plastic barriers and telling the public that, if they left the area, they would not be allowed to return. In hours, those same plastic barriers would be overturned to be used as stepladders to vault over the concrete and the police would be in near-full retreat from Admiralty.

My home is normally Beijing, where I file for The Diplomat, so I very much looked forward to buying a good newspaper, which is not an option on the mainland. It read, “OCCUPY CENTRAL WILL START NOW.”

By noon, police were cordoning off Admiralty with red and white plastic barriers, but the protest was almost entirely defensive, young people with microphones shouting out their statements with bottles of water in hand. The oppressive heat was already having an effect on even the most dedicated protesters. Whatever the result of the eventual protest, its beginnings were innocent and protective – bags demarcating organic waste and plastic, kind youngsters offering bottles of water and cling film to protect from pepper spray, chants expressing appreciation for the police. Outside, the Filipino and Indonesian domestic workers went about their Sunday communal routine of laying about and enjoying cards and food.

Several media outlets have claimed that once Occupy co-opted the protests, the students left. This is entirely untrue, but it is true that the students were joined by others, including Christians and the ever-present Falun Gong – there was even a pro-mainland get-together not far from the demonstrations in Admiralty to celebrate 65 years of Chinese-ness. But slowly, those not serious about the protest filtered out and Admiralty was successfully occupied. Then the tear gas came.

The defensive placation by the protesters had changed. They were in charge now. Police vans were abandoned and the protesters vandalized them, plastic barriers were used to climb the concrete ones, and tens of thousands of people were in driving the police from the street.

As the night wore on, the surrounding streets became occupied by separate bands of protesters. Wanchai station, a full subway stop from the heart of the protest, saw young kids on the ground groaning and kicking their feet with the pain of pepper spray. Lockhart Road’s prostitutes were still selling their wares to lonely foreigners as phalanxes of police pushed through the crowds of protesters.

Claims have been made by credible sources that Occupy merely hijacked the student protest, but interviews onsite seem to disagree with this. Many of the people I spoke with had been there for a full two days in the heat and hell of Hong Kong’s humidity and police force. While Occupy may have “hijacked,” their goals are by no means at odds with the students.

The feeling on the ground at the protest was hopeful, as it always is with large protests and strikes. The protesters themselves were helpful, polite and peaceful. But today, the protest hangover kicks in; the protesters will no doubt be feeling their stamina wane and people trying to get to work may lose all sympathy. Central has been occupied, and now begins the Attrition of Central.