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SINO DAILY
Hong Kong police fire pepper spray at anti-mainland protesters
by Staff Writers
Hong Kong (AFP) Feb 8, 2015


China seizes toilet paper ridiculing Hong Kong leader
Hong Kong (AFP) Feb 7, 2015 - China has wiped the smile off pro-democracy activists' faces by seizing 7,600 rolls of toilet paper featuring Hong Kong's pro-Beijing leader Leung Chun-ying pulling a series of ridiculous expressions.

Hong Kong's Democratic Party said the politically charged toilet paper, along with 20,000 packets of tissues, were to be sold at a popular Chinese New Year fair opening next week before the products were seized by mainland authorities.

Hong Kong's pro-democracy activists frequently ridicule Leung, portraying him as Dracula and a wolf, and repeatedly called for him to step down during more than two months of demonstrations late last year.

The Democratic Party -- the largest pro-democracy group in the southern Chinese city -- hoped to sell the tissues to raise funds for their activities ahead of a week-long holiday beginning on February 19.

"I think the Chinese government just wants to suppress all different opinions," the party's chief Lam Cheuk-ting told AFP, adding that Chinese authorities seized the products at a factory at an undisclosed location on the mainland on Friday morning.

"Our products are just some kind of joke, which presents no harm to so-called national security," Lam said.

"It is a violation of freedom of expression," he said, adding that activists were working on a backup plan to ensure the product range would still be available, but refused to give further details.

Lam said the party was expecting to incur HK$100,000 ($12,898) in lost sales on top of a $20,000 non-refundable deposit already paid to the manufacturer.

China has promised Hong Kongers the right to vote for their next leader, or chief executive, for the first time in 2017. But it ruled that nominees must be vetted by a pro-Beijing committee, a proposal which has been heavily criticised by activists.

A British colony until 1997, Hong Kong is ruled under a "one country, two systems" deal that allows it far greater civil liberties than those enjoyed on the Chinese mainland, including freedom of speech and the right to protest.

Huge pro-democracy rallies held in the city last year drew around 100,000 at their height and saw intermittent violent clashes with police, but public support faded after key intersections in the city were blocked for two months by sprawling camps.

Hong Kong police fired pepper spray and arrested protesters demonstrating against an influx of visitors from mainland China inside a shopping mall Sunday, reports said.

More than 100 people took part in the protest in the town of Tuen Mun in the New Territories, not far from one of the border crossings to the mainland.

Local residents are becoming increasingly angry at the growing number of mainland Chinese traders, who they say have disrupted their daily lives and clogged public transport.

The so-called parallel traders typically travel to Hong Kong by train and stock up on everything from iPads to milk powder, taking advantage of lower prices, wider choice and better quality in the city and dodging hefty tariffs on their return.

Sunday's protest was largely peaceful until a group of activists broke off and headed into shopping malls despite police warnings.

Pepper spray was used against protesters inside one mall. Broadcaster RTHK said about 10 people had been arrested following rowdy demonstrations in which protesters shouted at police and mainland visitors, forcing some shops to close early.

Police were unable to provide details when contacted by AFP.

"Police have used pepper spray and brought out batons inside a shopping mall, there are injured people that are being surrounded by police," rally organiser Hong Kong Indigenous said on their Facebook page.

It was the first time police had used pepper spray since a series of major pro-democracy rallies in the city last year which saw intermittent violent clashes with police.

The semi-autonomous Chinese city governs itself in many matters and imposes restrictions on tourists from the mainland.

But Hong Kong's leaders have expanded tourist quotas in recent years to try to prop up the city's economy.

The influx has caused tensions between Hong Kongers and mainland Chinese to soar.

Reports said an estimated 10,000-12,000 mainland traders travelled to Tuen Mun within three hours after shopping malls there offered free bus rides.

The city in 2013 barred people from crossing into mainland China with large quantities of baby formula.


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