February 8, 2016: Night of mob violence in Mong Kok leaves Hong Kong on edge
- Rioters lay siege to streets of Mong Kok after crackdown on unlicensed hawkers sparks violence
By Stuart Lau, Chris Lau and Christy Leung
Hong Kong was in shock yesterday and remained on edge after overnight rioting on Monday in the streets of Mong Kok prompted police to fire shots in the air, left scores injured, and led to the arrests of 61 people.
Hundreds of people were involved in the anarchy that turned parts of Nathan Road, Shandong Street, Argyle Street and Nelson Street into burning war zones as rampaging protesters fought battles with outnumbered police and damaged public property on a scale of “organised” violence not seen even during the height of the 2014 Occupy Central campaign.
The rioting, which started after protesters objected to the eviction of food hawkers on the first day of the Lunar New Year, “cannot be justified by any remarks expressing toleration”, Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying said yesterday.
“I believe the public can see for themselves from TV news reports the seriousness of the situation,” he said. “The SAR Government strongly condemns such violent acts; the police will apprehend the mobs and bring them to justice.”