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Hong Kong police arrest key protesters, clear site

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Police officers clear metal barricades while others tear down tents and canopies and carry away other obstructions after bailiffs issued a warning to the crowd they would start enforcing the court-ordered clearance at an occupied area in Mong Kok district of Hong Kong Wednesday.

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A protester holds a yellow umbrella, the symbol of Hong Kong’s pro-democracy movement at the barricades as the police keep clearing them away at an occupied area in Mong Kok district of Hong Kong Wednesday.

HONG KONG – Police arrested key student leaders of Hong Kong’s pro-democracy protests Wednesday as they cleared barricades in one volatile district, throwing into doubt the future of a 2-month-old movement seeking free elections in the former British colony.

On the second day of the operation to clear one of three protest zones, police in helmets swiftly removed metal barricades, tents, canopies and other obstructions in Mong Kok, a crowded, blue-collar neighborhood that was the flash point of earlier clashes.

The two remaining protest zones are the sprawling main camp next to government headquarters on the edge of the financial district and a smaller one in the Causeway Bay shopping district.

Many protesters scattered during the police clearance Wednesday, but a handful faced off briefly against dozens of officers on a side street, determined to await supporters they expected would join them in the evening after getting off school or work.

Mong Kok was home to a more raucous and aggressive group of protesters than at the two other sites. Previous efforts to clear the area backfired, sending more people into the streets in the evening to confront police.

Police spokesman Steve Hui said a total of 148 people were arrested, including 55 for contempt of court and obstructing officers carrying out the court-ordered barricade removals over two days. In chaotic pepper spray-fueled clashes that ensued after Tuesday’s barricade removal, police arrested 93 more for resisting arrest, disorderly conduct, unlawful assembly and possessing offensive weapons.

Among those arrested Wednesday were protest leaders Joshua Wong, the 18-year-old head of the Scholarism group, and Lester Shum, deputy secretary general of the Hong Kong Federation of Students.

“After the clearance operation, we don’t have a leader,” said protester Ken Lee, 19, who quit his job at a restaurant in October after the protests erupted and spent his days in Mong Kok. “We need to wait until tonight, it all depends on what happens tonight, if the majority of the people want to reoccupy the area or go to another location.”

The protesters are demanding that Hong Kong’s government scrap a plan mandated by China’s Communist leaders to use a panel of Beijing-friendly elites to screen candidates for the territory’s top leader in inaugural 2017 elections. The arrest of the student leaders could reinvigorate the protest movement, which was losing steam as the Hong Kong government’s apparent strategy of waiting out the protesters left them with few options.

Organizers estimated that as many as 200,000 people took to the semiautonomous Chinese city’s streets at the start of the protests, but numbers since dwindled sharply, along with public support.

In the latest push, police were acting to enforce a court injunction granted to taxi drivers to remove obstructions along Mong Kok’s Nathan Road. Cleanup crews piled up junk left behind by the protesters and the road gradually opened up to traffic and pedestrians later Wednesday.

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