Hong Kong: Anger as face masks banned after months of protests

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Hong Kong’s chief executive Carrie Lam has used a colonial-era emergency law to ban face masks to try to quell months of anti-government unrest.

 

 

 

She said the ban would come into force on Saturday, after an escalation of violence during protests on 1 October.

 

Ms Lam said the decision was taken because the situation could not be allowed “to get worse and worse”.

 

Protesters, who have promised to defy the new law, immediately took to the streets in response.

 

Mask-wearing activists had also earlier called on others to wear masks in defiance of the government, which critics fear is becoming increasingly authoritarian.

 

Ms Lam said she was forced to implement the colonial-era law because the violence at the now-weekly protests was “destroying the city”.

 

Observers say the regulation will be hard to enforce and hugely controversial.

 

Critics have warned the mask ban could be the first in a series of “draconian” measures.

 

“This is a watershed. This is a Rubicon,” pro-democracy lawmaker Claudia Mo told news agency AFP. “And I’m worried this could be just a starter. More draconian bans in the name of law could be lurking around the corner.”

 

 

Secretary for Security John Lee said the ban would apply for approved and unapproved public assemblies – rallies and marches – as well as in unlawful assemblies and riots.

 

The ban covers all kinds of facial covering, including face paint. Protesters have increasingly worn masks for a number of reasons, including to conceal their identities and to protect themselves from tear gas.

 

There are exemptions for people wearing masks for health reasons, or if required by their profession.

 

Ms Lam said “violence had been escalating to alarming levels” leading to a situation of “chaos and panic” in the city.

 

 

The legislation invoked by Ms Lam, called the Emergency Regulations Ordinance, dates to 1922 and has not been used in more than 50 years.

 

It enables the chief executive to bypass the normal legislative process, where bills have to go through the city’s parliament, the Legislative Council.

 

The ERO was last used in 1967 to help stop riots in the territory’s trading hub.

 

Ms Lam stressed the new regulation did not mean that Hong Kong was in a state of emergency. But she said the city was “in a state of serious public danger”.

What else did Carrie Lam say?

 

The city’s chief executive said what had been single rallies or marches, when the protests began, had spread to many areas across Hong Kong.

 

She said petrol bombs were being used inside closed spaces like railway stations, and that violent protesters had targeted public buildings and private properties.

 

She also accused protesters of not just criticising but “lynching” people with different views. It is unclear exactly what she was referring to.

 

 

According to the government, the percentage of demonstrators who are students has risen from 25% to 38%. Ms Lam said the mask ban would help prevent students breaking the law.

 

She also pointed out that similar bans on facial coverings were in place in other places around the world.