Police draw their guns after being attacked by Hong Kong protesters

Police draw their guns after being attacked by Hong Kong protesters

Officers were chased by demonstrators who called them "gangsters" in a second successive day of violence in the Chinese territory.

Hong Kong police pulls their guns
Image: Hong Kong police drew their guns during the protests
Hong Kong police have drawn their guns and one fired a warning shot into the air after they were attacked by protesters with sticks and rods.
The officers had been chased by the demonstrators who called them "gangsters" during a second successive day of violence in the Chinese territory.
There had been a standoff earlier as police used tear gas to clear a large group of anti-government protesters who had occupied a main street in the Tsuen Wan district.

Officers also used water cannon against activists for the first time in this summer's wave of demonstrations in the former British colony.
There were skirmishes between officers and brick-throwing activists following a pro-democracy march in Kwai Fong in the New Territories, where tens of thousands of people took to the streets.
A large crowd then attended a rally in a park but a separate group of protesters took over a main road nearby, putting up barricades with traffic barriers and cones.
Water cannon in Hong Kong
Image: Water cannon were deployed by police in Hong Kong
Hong Kong demonstrators
Image: Demonstrators are surrounded by tear gas
Police tried to disperse them by firing tear gas but protesters reacted by hurling bricks and other objects towards the
At least one petrol bomb was thrown by protesters, some of whom then moved down narrow side streets where the water cannon could not follow.
Police said: "Some radical protesters have removed railings... and set up barricades with water-filled barriers, bamboo sticks, traffic cones and other objects.
"Such acts neglect the safety of citizens and road users, paralysing traffic in the vicinity."
The violence came a day after similar clashes in the Kowloon Bay district, where authorities arrested 29 people for offences including unlawful assembly, possession of offensive weapons and assaulting police officers.
Two crowd-control vehicles fitted with water cannons were deployed on the streets on Sunday.
The South China Morning Post reported the custom-built French trucks have 15 high-pressure cannons each.
Police fire tear gas
Image: Police fire tear gas at protesters
A demonstrator uses a catapult as protesters clash with riot police
Image: A demonstrator uses a catapult as protesters clash with riot police
Two cannons on the roof can fire more than 1,200 litres of water a minute over a distance of 50 metres. The water can be mixed with tear gas or liquid dye as well.
The cannons should only be aimed at the lower limbs of the protesters, according to guidelines.
An assistant commissioner of police overseeing operations is allowed to authorise deployment of the water cannon after assessing threats.
Protest march in Hong Kong
Image: Tens of thousands of people took part in a pro-democracy march
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The trucks arrived in the city in May last year.
The latest wave of demonstrations began almost three months ago over a now-suspended bill which would allow criminal suspects in Hong Kong to be extradited to mainland China.
The protests are also fuelled by concerns about the erosion of freedoms guaranteed under the "one country, two systems" formula that was put in place after the territory returned from UK to Chinese rule in 1997.