Updated December 8th, 2019 at 16:37 IST

Hong Kong police seize weapons like pistols, ammunition ahead of protest

Hong Kong said on December 8 that they conducted raids in the sidelines of a major rally and discovered weapons which include pistol and ammunition.

Reported by: Sounak Mitra
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Hong Kong police said on December 8 that they conducted raids in the sidelines of a major rally and discovered weapons which include pistol and ammunition. This is the first firearm seizure that is linked to the protests directly. The city marked another huge rally on Sunday afternoon as the pro-democracy protestors stuck to their demand for greater democratic reforms and police accountability.

READ: Hong Kong Gears Up For Mass Rally To Support Pro-democracy Demonstrations

Police retrieve chemicals, petrol bombs

The police displayed weapons that they claim had been found during overnight raids at eleven locations just some hours before the march was due to start. The display included a Glock semi-automatic pistol with 105 rounds, a samurai sword, nine extendable batons, bottles of pepper spray and knives. Police added that 11 people have been taken into custody.
Hong Kong police have retrieved the gathering of newly discovered chemicals and petrol bombs assembled by the anti-government protestors in a college campus of the semi-autonomous Chinese territory on December 4. They reentered the campus besieged by the young protestors for more than a week.

READ: Hong Kong Police Chief Permits Large Scale Anti-government Demonstration

Universities become battlefields

Officers were called to retrieve additional dangerous items found among the debris. Riot police in Hong Kong battled with the pro-democracy protestors at different varsity campuses and brought to a halt the city's upscale business hub on November 12. It was considered to be one of the most violent phases of unrest seen in more than five months of widespread protests. The recent violence sparked since Monday when a police officer shot a protestor on Monday and a man was set on fire in the neighboring district. The universities present in the city emerged as battlefields throughout Tuesday, November 12 with sustained clashes at major campuses for the first time. The main violence erupted from the Chinese University of Hong Kong where the usual grounds were turned into a battlefield. Police fired tear gas and rubber bullets at hundreds of protestors who encroached the road with barricades resulting in an hour-long stand-off between both sides.

READ: Hong Kong Police Recovers Chemicals, Petrol Bombs From University

READ: Hong Kongers Seeking Asylum In Taiwan To Start New Life Amid Uncertainty

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Published December 8th, 2019 at 15:33 IST