Hong Kong universities remained shuttered for a second day after protest-related violence across the city led to nearly 100 injuries and 260 arrests on 11 November. 聽
Classes and most graduation ceremonies were cancelled at nine public and two private universities on 12 November,听with several institutions saying that closures would continue through 13 November.听The Vocational Training Council suspended classes at its 13 tertiary education centres聽after one of its students, an unarmed 21-year-old, was shot by the police in a residential area the previous day.
The shooting added fuel to the fire in a city still reeling from two incidents last week at The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology. At an open forum about the protests, a HKUST student from mainland China was beaten in what the administration called 鈥渢otally unacceptable assault and battery鈥. A few days later, another聽HKUST student died from injuries聽linked to off-campus police tear-gassing.听HKUST tightened security this week so that only 鈥渁uthorised persons鈥 can enter campus.
News of the assault on the vocational student went viral. Soon after, protests broke out at聽the University of Hong Kong,听Chinese University of Hong Kong and聽Hong Kong Polytechnic University聽(PolyU), leading the police to deploy tear gas on university grounds for the first time since pro-democracy demonstrations began nearly six months ago. On 12 November, clashes spread to聽City University of Hong Kong.听
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Hong Kong has an established protocol in which police officers do not enter campuses unless they have prior permission, are responding to a 999 emergency call, or hold a search warrant or court order. Some students, feeling that the tacit agreement between universities and the police was breached, built barricades and set fires to prevent officers entering campuses.
HKU said in聽聽that the police cleared roadblocks to an entrance, chased students onto campus, and that 鈥渢ear gas and pepper spray were fired in the vicinity鈥.听After five HKU students were arrested within a 24-hour period, HKU president Xiang Zhang appealed to the police commissioner to 鈥渆nsure the safety of the detained students and to observe fully their fundamental rights鈥.听He also clarified that a聽police ordinance does allow officers to enter without consent if they 鈥渞easonably suspect鈥 there is cause for arrest.听
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鈥淲e understand that these are times when emotions are running high everywhere,鈥 Professor Zhang wrote in an email to the university community. 鈥淲e are also very saddened to see the casualties and loss of life arising from the protests. Let us remember that this is our campus, where we study and work, and we should safeguard it.鈥
Fu Hualing and Johannes Chan, HKU鈥檚 current and former law school deans, tried to deter vandals at an on-campus聽subway station.听鈥淵ou are HKU students,鈥 Professor Fu said to a group of masked youth. 鈥淵ou can do better. You must do better. Let鈥檚 talk about this. Let鈥檚 do it. It鈥檚 only been a half a year. You fight for democracy 鈥 it鈥檚 a lifetime commitment.鈥澛燭he visibly distraught students responded by asking 鈥淗ow many people do we have to sacrifice? Do we let it go on? Until we die? We will not forgive. We will not forget.鈥 The聽scene was caught聽, a lawyer and author whose HKU master鈥檚 thesis was about the pro-democracy Umbrella Movement.
CUHK looked like a war zone in聽, which showed protesters trying to fortify a 鈥渄efence line鈥 against officers in riot gear.听Some students huddled under umbrellas or hid behind mattresses to protect themselves from plumes of tear gas.听At PolyU, a fire was lit on the pedestrian overpass connecting campus to a busy urban area. The arson happened near the entrance of a cross-harbour tunnel, one of the city鈥檚 main transport thoroughfares.
More than 700 tertiary students were arrested between June and 5 November, according to聽, a Chinese-language Hong Kong newspaper.
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