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Hong Kong financial workers stage flash protest

Hundreds of financial workers braved pouring rain to gather in central Hong Kong Thursday, giving that sector's support to mass protests that have roiled the territory for weeks.

People from the finance community hold up umbrellas and shine lights during a protest against a controversial extradition bill in Hong Kong on August 1, 2019. – Hundreds of financial workers braved pouring rain to gather in central Hong Kong on August 1, giving that sector’s support to mass protests that have roiled the territory for weeks. (Photo by ISAAC LAWRENCE / AFP)

Hundreds of financial workers braved pouring rain to gather in central Hong Kong Thursday, giving that sector’s support to mass protests that have roiled the territory for weeks.

According to organisers on the messaging app Telegram, workers from around 80 banks gathered at Chater Gardens in the heart of the financial district and more than 700 workers posted photos of their staff cards to declare they would also join a city-wide strike called for next Monday.

Over a thousand people flashed their mobile phone torches through umbrellas Thursday night to create a spontaneous light show and chanted “add oil” — a slogan that offers encouragement to protesters.

Participants said they were angered by alleged cooperation between police and gangsters last month when a gang of white-clad suspected triad members armed with poles attacked anti-government protesters and bystanders in Yuen Long, a border town near the mainland.

Police was accused of reacting too slowly to the incident and being too lenient with the thugs.

“There is too much evidence that leads to police-triad collusion,” KS Wong, who works at HSBC retail banking, told AFP.

“Foreign investors are confident in our market as they are confident in our rule of law, but if there is police-triad collusion… it means there is a big problem on our rule of law,” Wong added.

Dozens of Hong Kong pro-democracy protesters appeared in court Wednesday after being charged with rioting, setting the stage for further unrest in a weeks-long crisis that has rocked the global financial hub.

Semi-autonomous Hong Kong has endured more than seven weeks of unrest that began with a government bid to introduce a law that would have allowed extraditions to mainland China.

The government has shown no sign of backing down beyond agreeing to suspend the extradition bill.

The demonstrations have since evolved into a call for wider democratic reforms and a halt to eroding freedoms.

“It will definitely deteriorate the quality of the banking industry. People will migrate out of Hong Kong together with their property,” a Standard Chartered retail banking staffer, who gave his surname as Lee, told AFP.

Hong Kong protesters have a busy schedule in the coming days with a civil servants’ rally planned for Friday night, pro-democracy demonstrations during the weekend and a large-scale strike on Monday.

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