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AS HONG KONG STOOD UP FOR DEMOCRACY, A NEIGHBORHOOD WAS BRUTALIZED

By Shibani Mahtani
and 
Timothy McLaughlin
November 3, 2023 at 1:00 a.m. EDT

A demonstrator draws attention to a photo of Li Peng, China's former premier,
during a protest in the Yuen Long area of Hong Kong on July 27, 2019. In 2019,
pro-democracy protests erupted in Hong Kong over a bill that would erode the
legal firewall between the territory and China.(Paul Yeung/Bloomberg/Getty
Images)

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This article is adapted from “Among the Braves: Hope, Struggle, and Exile in the
Battle for Hong Kong and the Future of Global Democracy,” which will be
published by Hachette Books on Nov. 7.

Almost everyone living in the Hong Kong neighborhood of Yuen Long heard the
warnings. In the days before July 21, 2019, rumors circulated in forwarded
messages, then by word of mouth: Residents should be alert to possible violence,
directed at those supporting the pro-democracy protest movement.



“Please try to stay out of Yuen Long after noon on Sunday,” one message read.
“If you do go there, wear white, don’t wear a mask. The bosses in Yuen Long had
a meeting and decided to wear white shirts, they don’t want to hit the wrong
people.” Other messages were far more graphic: “If you wear a mask in Yuen Long,
both your arms and legs will be amputated.”

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Hong Kong was in revolt that summer, the largest uprising on Chinese soil since
the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests. The discontent had started with a proposed
bill that would allow fugitives to be transferred from Hong Kong to mainland
China, but grew to encompass anxieties about Beijing’s control that predated the
territory’s 1997 handover from Britain. The movement that emerged was the last
stand of an in-between place: not China but not independent; fiercely proud of
its democratic culture but without the luxury of democratic governance; promised
rights like free speech and free assembly but ruled by one of the world’s most
powerful authoritarian states.

Events in Yuen Long on the night of July 21 when residents were brutalized by
marauding gangs would rupture whatever hope still existed that Hong Kong could
reach some kind of political compromise. Reporting for a narrative history of
the pro-democracy movement reveals that the police were aware of the planned
attacks, as were government officials close to Hong Kong’s political leadership.
Yet they did nothing to stop it.



As Beijing has systematically snuffed out Hong Kong’s democratic ambitions over
the last four years, while rewriting the story of the 2019 protests, the
official narrative of what happened in Yuen Long has been manipulated too —
exonerating the police, who have faced no consequences for their failings, while
the victims have been prosecuted as perpetrators.

Millions first took to the streets on June 9, 2019, a Sunday, following a route
that had been walked by countless other marchers over Hong Kong’s history.
Demonstrators gathered at Victoria Park, then ambled down the roads of Wan Chai
towards Admiralty, the administrative center, and dispersed into Central, where
bank logos decorate skyscrapers. The peaceful tone of the protests changed on
June 12, when police responded to demonstrators disrupting a second reading of
the extradition bill with tear gas, rubber bullets and beatings, then an
unprecedented use of force. Protesters almost uniformly began covering their
faces, at least with a surgical mask.



Ahead of July 21 — the seventh Sunday since the movement began — protesters,
journalists, the police, and the city’s government had their focus again on
central Hong Kong, where another mass demonstration had been called. That
afternoon, around 430,000 people had joined.

By nightfall, a coordinated attack would shift focus away from that part of the
city. Within hours, Yuen Long and the date, 7/21, would become shorthand for the
lengths that pro-Beijing thugs — men wearing white clothing — would go to
terrify the city into submission.


‘HIT HIM! HIT HIM!’

Up in the northern New Territories on the edge of Hong Kong, close to the border
with Shenzhen, Yuen Long was an insular, rural community that was also a
historic stronghold for triad gangs — organized crime groups with deep roots in
the city and in mainland China. In Yuen Long, elements of Hong Kong’s underworld
intermingled with local officials and rural power brokers, creating a form of
informal self-rule largely tolerated by the authorities. The demographics,
however, had started to shift, as young couples and others moved into relatively
affordable housing developments. The modern condos butting up against aging
village houses were a physical representation of the multitudes contained in
Hong Kong.

Calvin So, 23, was a lifelong Yuen Long resident. He too had heard the rumors in
the days before July 21, but paid them little mind. He was preoccupied that
Sunday with his long shift cooking at the Le Grand Pokka Café, a family
restaurant inside a large shopping mall.

Skip to end of carousel


ABOUT SHIBANI MAHTANI AND TIMOTHY MCLAUGHLIN

Among The Braves by Shibani Mahtani and Timothy McLaughlin (Courtesy of Hachette
Books)
Shibani Mahtani and Timothy McLaughlin covered the 2019 pro-democracy protests
in Hong Kong. Their new book, “Among the Braves: Hope, Struggle and Exile in the
Battle for Hong Kong and the Future of Global Democracy,” is an immersive
narrative of how that struggle for freedom unfolded, centered around a group of
activists who faced Beijing’s brutal crackdown.

End of carousel

When So checked his phone before helping close up the restaurant at 9 p.m., he
saw a post about a group of men gathered in a nearby park that he passed daily
on his walk home. When he neared the park, So saw that the loitering group of
men had swelled in size. There were dozens now, maybe more than a hundred
milling about. All wore white shirts. More troubling than the coordinated
outfits was the fact that many held thin wooden rods. A few were adorned with
the Hong Kong or Chinese flag.

As he passed, So remarked to no one in particular, “Wow, really so many white
shirt people.”

The banal comment was enough to attract one man’s ire. “What did you say?” he
yelled. So kept walking, but the man and others started to keep pace alongside
him. They heckled as they walked. People nearby began to record what was
happening. When the first blow thudded across his back, So tried to ignore it.
Another hit followed; within a moment the street was the scene of a violent
frenzy. The men lashed So across the back. Some pounded his head and neck with
their fists. “Hit him! Hit him!” a man screamed over and over. So pleaded with
them to stop. The attack lasted just minutes, but the men had transformed his
back into a grotesque latticework of deep purple welts.


‘THIS IS YUEN LONG STATION’

Gwyneth Ho, a journalist for Stand News, was at her parents’ home in Yuen Long
when she noticed a clip of So’s assault spreading online. The video circulating
was a horrifying scene, but not the biggest news of the day. Over on Hong Kong
Island, protesters had upped the stakes by refusing to disperse in Central and
instead continuing west. Their target was Beijing’s Liaison Office, the most
prominent symbol of the Chinese Communist Party in Hong Kong. They spray-painted
the walls with graffiti and pelted the gaudy gold and red emblem of China
affixed to the building with paint-filled balloons until it was all but
unrecognizable.

The incident was the first direct attack targeted at Beijing, rather than
symbols of the Hong Kong government. Ho urgently needed to get there to relieve
her colleague, who had been covering the day’s protests for hours. She headed to
Yuen Long station to catch the train.



As Ho entered, it became immediately apparent that something was wrong. Groups
of men in white shirts, like the one she saw in the video beating So, rushed
past her. They freely roamed the halls of the vast station, hitting people with
bamboo sticks seemingly at random.

Ho looked around and didn’t see any police officers, not the regular patrol cops
dressed in blue or the riot police in their green fatigues. She dipped into a
bathroom. Inside, she saw a middle-aged woman with blood pouring from her head.
She told Ho she had been hit two or three times by men with wooden canes before
they sprinted off. Ho slipped on her fluorescent yellow vest with PRESS stamped
across the back; she was the only reporter in the station.

Ho positioned herself in the relative safety of the station’s paid area,
separated from the main publicly accessible hall by turnstiles and a waist-high
metal and glass barrier. Standing with the journalist was a crowd of
demonstrators returning home from Hong Kong Island, along with everyday
commuters. On the other side were dozens of the men in white shirts. Some kept
pitching forward, waving their sticks in the air and menacing people.

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Stand News’s preferred form of disseminating news that summer was
live-streaming. It offered an unfiltered, immersive view of the protests in real
time, and had made stars of reporters like Ho who could offer their own
commentary as they broadcast. She held up her phone and began streaming to Stand
News’s Facebook page at 10:40 p.m.



“Hi, everyone, this is …” Ho hesitated for a beat before restarting her
introduction. “Stand News viewers, this is Yuen Long station,” she said. She
sounded like a dispatcher radioing for help. “I will repeat again,” she said a
few moments later, as if to convince viewers, and maybe herself, that what they
were seeing was indeed real, “this is live from Yuen Long station.”

About seven minutes later, most of the mob started moving to another part of the
station. Ho tapped her subway pass, exited the paid area, and followed, filming
as she walked. She was fixated on the phone, the world around her reduced to a
tiny screen. A man in a peach-colored shirt, the buttons undone as if heading
off on a beach holiday, appeared behind her. She swiveled to her left to capture
him, smacking a bystander with a wooden rod.

The man noticed Ho recording him. He rushed toward her in a manic sprint, lifted
his rod in the air, and struck her multiple times. Ho let out two screams as she
fell to the tile floor. From the ground, she continued to film while trying to
protect herself as the man flailed manically above her.

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Scrambling back to her feet, Ho captured a group of men surrounding another in a
black T-shirt and brown pants, standing directly in front of her. One of his
attackers, dressed in a white shirt and a black Louis Vuitton belt, looked
straight into her camera, waving a bamboo stick in his left hand like a deranged
practitioner of martial arts. Someone slammed Ho to the ground a few seconds
later. Her camera captured a swirl of fluorescent lights and tiles, and recorded
her scream.

Elsewhere in the station, the savagery continued. Passengers hiding in the train
above the main hall were easy targets. The men in white entered through the open
car doors and bloodied them. One desperate victim fell to his knees and begged
them to stop.

Two uniformed police officers who were dispatched to the station just before 11
p.m. glanced around at the scene and casually strolled away down a pedestrian
bridge, not even turning back to see what was unfolding behind them.


‘WEAR ONLY WHITE’

By July 21, following violence at earlier protests, the Hong Kong police force
had started to be perceived as occupiers doing mercenary work for Beijing rather
than acting as a legitimate policing unit. At Yuen Long on July 21, police had
the opportunity to reverse that growing perception and prove their professional,
unbiased role. The public was begging them for help. Some 24,000 panicked calls
were placed to emergency services over a period of three hours, alerting them to
the scenes unfolding in Yuen Long.

The police also knew in advance that violence was likely in the neighborhood. A
week prior, members of five separate triad groups joined a WhatsApp group to
discuss plans to “defend their homeland,” Yuen Long. It was rare for these
groups to come together, as they often clashed over their share of illicit
business. As the triad groups coordinated their plans for July 21, a detective
sergeant from the anti-triad bureau that oversaw the area was reading along. He
had managed to gain access to the WhatsApp group chat, giving him unfettered
insight into the plans.

It took 39 minutes from the start of the attack on July 21 for police to arrive.
When around 40 officers equipped with body armor and riot-control gear gathered
outside Yuen Long station, they were noticeably restrained when dealing with the
mob of men compared to the protesters. There were no rubber bullets or beanbag
rounds, not even a foot chase. Instead, officers allowed the men to exit without
issue.

The police response would come to be defined by a photo: a riot officer with his
hand amicably placed on one of the white-clad men’s shoulders.

The failure to intervene extended from the police to those who ostensibly
controlled them. Inside the secure confines of Government House, Hong Kong’s
leadership was blithely unaware of the crisis in Yuen Long. It would have
remained so had Betty Fung not needed to use the bathroom.

Fung was one of Hong Kong chief executive Carrie Lam’s few trusted aides. She
was huddled with Lam and a handful of advisers that night, monitoring the
protests on television. For security purposes, the officials left their phones
outside the room. When she checked her phone on her way to the bathroom, Fung
saw that a group of young staffers were posting about an attack in Yuen Long
station. She responded with surprise, and then incredulity. You “can’t just rely
on YouTube clips,” she responded in a WhatsApp chat, warning that there was a
lot of “fake news circulating around.” Her younger colleagues were stunned that
after nearly two months of protests, top officials in government were just
watching TV, seemingly unaware of live streams, online forums and Telegram
channels.

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Lam’s administration should not have needed Fung to alert them. The government
already knew who some of the men were. Some 24 hours before the attacks began,
the political assistant of a secretary close to Lam attended a banquet in a
rural village in Yuen Long. It was part of a slew of festivities celebrating the
inauguration of newly elected village leaders. Also present were members of
Beijing’s Liaison Office, and pro-Beijing lawmakers.

At one point in the July 20 celebrations, Yuen Long village leaders posed for a
group photo. Standing among a line of men arranged in a neat row behind three
suckling pigs, laid out on a table draped with a red tablecloth, was a man
identified as Stephen Ng. Ho captured Ng on her live stream from Yuen Long
station the next night, wooden stick in hand, shouting at and then beating an
unarmed, defenseless man. Ng was wearing the same Louis Vuitton belt, its “LV”
hardware as clear in her footage as it was on the night of the banquet.

The government officials in attendance offered hints that the rumors had reached
them, too. The political assistant to the secretary for mainland affairs had
invited some others to join him at the banquet. He gave them a very specific
dress code: “Wear only white.”


‘TEACHING THE KIDS A LESSON’

What took place on July 21, 2019, unleashed a flood of emotion: denial,
disbelief, shock, grief and anger. When emergency calls were ignored, when clips
of the light-touch approach to the men in white went viral, trust in the police
cratered.

On the streets, people began to call the police haak geng, combining the
characters used to describe triad societies and the police, implying they were
as “dirty” as the gangsters themselves. Many police officers sympathized with
the men in white. On WhatsApp groups, front-line officers in unrelated units
praised the men in white for “teaching the kids a lesson.”

Researchers at the Chinese University of Hong Kong found that 43 percent of the
Hong Kong public had zero trust in the police in the months following the Yuen
Long attacks.

Both the police and the government initially admitted to some failings. The
police commissioner at the time said he would review the force’s manpower
deployment, and Lam branded the attacks “shocking.” Just over a year on from the
attacks, however, the narrative started to shift. Police started by arresting
victims from that night — including an elected lawmaker who was hospitalized
with broken fingers and injuries to his face, arms and legs — and charged them
with rioting. They then characterized the beating of commuters and unarmed
protesters as clashes between “two evenly matched rivals.”

In a news conference announcing the arrests, a senior police official proclaimed
they had “restored the facts.”

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