Hong Kong protesters stage demonstration at airport arrivals hall

Travellers were greeted by a sea of black-clad protesters shouting anti-government chants, holding banners and handing out flyers

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Hundreds of Hong Kong protesters, including flight attendants, held a rally in the airport's arrival hall on Friday to "educate" visitors about the demonstrations currently roiling the city as it braces for another weekend of protests.

The hall is usually filled with excited friends and relatives waiting to greet loved ones as they make their way out of one of the world's busiest airports.

But on Friday visitors were greeted by a sea of black-clad protesters shouting anti-government chants, holding banners and handing out flyers.

The rally is the latest bid to keep pressure on Hong Kong's pro-Beijing leaders after seven weeks of largely peaceful mass demonstrations followed by violent clashes, an unprecedented challenge to Beijing's authority since the city's 1997 handover.

Demonstrators raise placards during a protest at Hong Kong International Airport, Friday, July 26, 2019. Hong Kong residents have been protesting for more than a month to call for democratic reforms and the withdrawal of a controversial extradition bill. Their five central demands include direct elections, the dissolution of the current legislature, and an investigation into alleged police brutality. Clashes between protesters and police and other parties have become increasingly violent. (AP Photo/Vincent Yu)
Demonstrators raise placards during a protest at Hong Kong International Airport. AP Photo

The protests were triggered by a controversial bill which would have allowed extraditions to mainland China, but they have evolved into a call for wider democratic reforms and a halt to sliding freedoms.

Organisers billed the airport rally as an opportunity to brief arrivals on the political unrest, particularly visitors from mainland China where the state-controlled news has portrayed the protests as a violent, foreign-funded plot to destabilise the motherland.

'Safety announcements'

One group of protesters were using a television to display a satirical version of an airline safety announcement video that details protester demands and warns of protests in the city.

"Kindly put on your masks and black t-shirts... when attending the assemblies," the video said, in reference to the colour widely adopted by anti-government demonstrators.

Others held "Tourist Warning" signs detailing how police have fired tear gas at protesters and how pro-government thugs attacked demonstrators last Sunday, putting 45 in hospital.

Meryl Yeung, a 29-year-old flight attendant, had just got off a flight and joined the protest.

"It's important to come to the airport and tell foreigners what's happening in Hong Kong," she said, adding it was especially vital to make sure people in China are made aware of the protests.

"They have no idea at all, they only get information from one side, they think everyone... coming to a protest, to a rally, are all rioters, or promoting Hong Kong independence," she said.

Yoko Tsang, 29, said the more she travelled around the world as a flight attendant, the more she has come to cherish Hong Kong's freedoms, which she feels are increasingly under attack.

"No matter where we go, Hong Kong is always our home and our roots," she said. "Whether it's before or after work, we have to fight for time to show our support in rallies."

Cathay Pacific's Flight Attendants Union said it supported the rally and encouraged members to join, a stance that earned it a rebuke in China's state media.

"We feel deep regret with the incapability of our [chief executive] Carrie Lam and her team that only play tricks to fool its people," the union said in a message on Facebook, referring to the city's leader.

Bracing for weekend clashes

Tourists had a variety of reactions to the display from baffled and bemused to supportive.

"I feel like I'm back home now because in Chile we have similar issues with the police," saidMargarita Duco, a 24-year-old traveller who was in Hong Kong on a stop-over.

"The excessive use of violence when there are peaceful manifestations, it's very common in my country so I can relate with what they are going through."

Hong Kong is bracing itself for another weekend of rallies and possible clashes.

Police have banned a planned protest on Saturday against suspected triad gangs who beat up pro-democracy demonstrators in the rural town of Yuen Long near China's border.

But messaging channels and forums used by activists suggest people plan to rally there regardless.

Another rally on Sunday will end close to China's Liaison Office, which was pelted with eggs last weekend before police used tear gas and rubber bullets to disperse protesters.