Knife-wielding man attacks Hong Kong pro-Beijing lawmaker - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 06:50 AM | Calgary | -17.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
World

Knife-wielding man attacks Hong Kong pro-Beijing lawmaker

A knife-wielding man on Wednesday attacked a pro-Beijing lawmaker who has taken a tough stand against anti-government protests in Hong Kong, police said, as more demonstrations were planned for the Asian financial hub.

Protests planned Wednesday at some of Hong Kong's universities

Pro-Beijing lawmaker Junius Ho argues with spectators in the chamber at Legislative Council in Hong Kong earlier this year. Ho, his assistant and an alleged attacker were taken to hospital following a knife attack. (Kin Cheung/Associated Press)

Beijing supports more bold measures to tackle the roots of unrest that has roiled Hong Kong for months, a senior Chinese official said on Wednesday, just hours after a knife-wielding man attacked a pro-Beijing lawmaker in the financial hub.

Han Zheng, China's vice-premier, at an official meeting with Hong Kong's embattled leader Carrie Lam in Beijing, said anti-government protests were damaging the "one country, two systems" formula under which the city has been governed since its handover from Britain to Beijing in 1997.

"We firmly support the Special Administrative Region government to adopt more proactive and more effective measures to solve the social problems," Han said, as he sat next to Lam in a meeting room in the Diaoyutai State Guesthouse.

Han said the social problems included unaffordable housing in the city, which is classified as a special region of China.

Protesters wearing a Guy Fawkes mask - after the British Catholic rebel who attempted to blow up Parliament in the fifteenth century - gather in the Kowloon district of Hong Kong on Tuesday. (Anthony Wallace/AFP via Getty Images)

China's Communist Party said on Tuesday it would not tolerate any "separatist behaviour" after some protesters called for independence. Han said the violence had exceeded the "bottom line" of the rule law and of morality.

What started as agitation against a now-scrapped extradition bill that would have allowed people to be sent to mainland China for trial, has widened into calls for full democracy, among other demands.

Biggest political crisis in decades

The more than five months of protests have plunged Hong Kong into its biggest political crisis in decades and pose one of the gravest challenges to Chinese President Xi Jinping's rule since he came to power in 2012.

Han was meeting Lam just hours after a man stabbed pro-Beijing lawmaker Junius Ho in the chest with a knife, the latest incident in a series of attacks on candidates running in the city's district council elections.

Both pro-democratic and pro-establishment figures have been targeted. The vote is on Nov. 24.

Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam denied rumours that the government was considering an amnesty for protesters charged with offences. (Aly Song/AFP via Getty Images)

The alleged attacker was subdued and arrested. Ho said in a statement posted online that he had suffered a knife wound to the upper left part of his chest, but said his life was not at risk. Two of his colleagues were also hurt, he said.

Victims of violence

The attacker's motive was not known but Ho gained notoriety among anti-government protesters in July when he was filmed laughing and shaking hands with suspected triad gang members who assaulted young demonstrators.

An online video showed the assailant handing Ho a bunch of yellow flowers, before taking a weapon out of his bag and stabbing him.

University students wearing Guy Fawkes masks pose during a news conference to support anti-government protests before their graduation ceremony at the Hong Kong Polytechnic University in Hong Kong on Tuesday. (Shannon Stapleton/Reuters)

Hong Kong's government strongly condemned the attack on Ho and said in a statement members of the public should "express their views in a peaceful and rational manner with respect for each other."

Among the prominent people to be attacked during the months of sometimes violent unrest was Jimmy Sham, a leader of Hong Kong's Civil Human Rights Front, which organized mass rallies against the extradition bill. He was attacked in October.

District Coun.Andrew Chiu was assaulted by a man who bit off part of his ear outside a shopping mall this week.

Further protests planned for universities

Further protests are planned on Wednesday at some of Hong Kong's universities, activists said. Police fired water cannons to disperse protesters at a Guy Fawkes-themed march on Tuesday.

Hundreds of black-clad student protesters gathered at the University of Hong Kong's campus to protest against perceived police brutality and to call for an independent investigation into an incident that left a student from another university fighting for his life.

The student fell during protests at the weekend and remained on life support, hospital authorities said, as some of his friends also gathered at the hospital to pray for him.

Protesters are demanding an end to perceived Chinese meddling in the territory's affairs, as well as universal suffrage and an independent inquiry into alleged police brutality, among other demands.

Beijing denies interfering and blames foreign governments for fuelling the unrest.

President Xi met Lam on Tuesday in Shanghai, vouching support for her administration.

Following the meeting, Lam denied rumours that the government was considering an amnesty for protesters charged with offences.