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Graphic VIDEO shows men armed with sticks thrashing commuters after Hong Kong protest

21-7-2019 < RT 44 452 words
 

A group of masked men in white T-shirts was filmed brutally assaulting train passengers with wooden sticks shortly after a massive opposition rally ended in Hong Kong. Some 45 people were injured, one critically.


A video surfaced on social media showing a group of men, many of them wearing surgical masks and armed with what looks like wooden clubs, storming a train car full of passengers at the Yuen Long station in Hong Kong. People are screaming and attempting to cover themselves from the blows, as attackers charge passengers at random.



The station was used by many of the demonstrators returning back home from a massive anti-government protest against the local and mainland Chinese governments. The video from inside the train car was streamed live by opposition Democratic Party lawmaker Lam Cheuk-ting, who was injured in the mayhem.









Another video shows the attackers beating up commuters as they try to climb the escalator, presumably at the same station.



It is speculated that the attackers were possible members of the “triads,” a transnational criminal organization based in Hong Kong, Taiwan, Singapore and in many countries with Chinese diasporas. The triads are often compared to the Western mafia.


Lam accused the police of responding too slowly, saying officers only came to the scene about an hour after he first reported the incident. The police responded that they were waiting for backup to address the situation with over 100 people involved. They have searched a nearby village, where people who looked like the attackers had been spotted, but made no arrests. Police have vowed to treat potential suspects “fairly no matter which camp they are.”


Also on rt.com Hong Kong police use tear gas, rubber bullets as protesters target Chinese govt office (VIDEO)

The protest earlier on Sunday night saw scuffles between stone-throwing demonstrators and police, who deployed tear gas and rubber bullets. At one point at the rally, protesters vandalized a Chinese government liaison office. The rallies are the latest in a wave sparked by a controversial extradition bill that could see criminals sent from the semi-autonomous city to mainland China. While the bill was suspended back in mid-June after the protests began, that failed to placate the opposition, which now wants it withdrawn completely.


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