Hong Kong violence prompts debate but no division among protesters
Even by the standards of Hong Kong's summer of rage, the last fortnight has been brutal.
After months of focusing their anger towards police, local government and symbols of Beijing's rule, hardcore protesters went on an unprecedented city-wide vandalism spree after the city's leader invoked emergency powers to ban face masks.
The subway system
Businesses perceived to be mainland-Chinese owned or Beijing loyalist
And multiple clashes showed demonstrators beating their ideological opponents.
'Red Guards'?
In one incident,
A movement initially founded on defending Hong Kong's independent judiciary from the authoritarian mainland was now increasingly meting out street justice.
The scenes have provoked
One post
"Continuing to escalate vandalism will only help public opinions on the opposite side and lose our support from international community," the author wrote, fretting that radicals risked being seen as a new iteration of Mao's violent "Red Guards
At a press conference on Friday night, anonymous protesters hinted at concerns
"I hope
But there was
Meanwhile, China's leader Xi Jinping said during a state visit to Nepal that any attempts to split China would
'Government the culprit'
Yet the violence appears to have done little to dent mainstream support.
Political analyst Dixon Sing said this was because neither Beijing nor Hong Kong's government have given protesters any incentives to de-escalate after four months of wielding a stick and offering few carrots.
"
"The increase in violence of the police has been a major factor in not detracting the overall support for the protesters, including those increasingly militant and violent attacks," he added.
Police have
Two teenagers
A phrase commonly adopted by protesters roughly translates to "we will not sever ties" pushing the idea the movement must remain unified
"Even if we're not
'They saved us'
Bonnie Leung
"All protesters are indebted to the braves as without them the bill would have
"There are discussions on the strategies though, whether the escalation is leading anywhere, and
"We have doubts, we discuss, we try to convince, but we
John, a self-described moderate protester in his forties, explained why he and his middle-class family still supported "the braves" as he ate McDonalds with his nine-year-old son.
"They saved this movement and are taking all the risks," he said, asking to only use his first name. "We have to be there for them now."
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