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Illustration: Craig Stephens

Someone has finally died.

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Although circumstances surrounding 22-year-old university student Chow Tsz-lok’s fall at a Tseung Kwan O car park on November 4 are still unclear, there had always been a sense of inevitability that a tragedy of this nature would take place after five months of unrest in Hong Kong.

As Hongkongers mourn the death of someone so young, we must also mourn what our city has become. While Chief Executive Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor and her team of political yes-men emphasise the impact of the protests on our city’s economy, tout President Xi Jinping’s continued support for her administration and condemn protesters as the “enemy of the people”, the ugliness of our government and police force is on full display.
We have a police force that includes a frontline officer who would open a bottle of champagne to celebrate Chow’s death. This is the same police force that has on more than one occasion treated fire and ambulance services with disdain.
After tearfully telling Hongkongers of her motherly sacrifices for Hong Kong in a live televised interview on June 12, and consoling a vandalised MTR turnstile the day following the September 8 march where protesters implored the United States Congress to pass its Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act, Lam has not visited any of the injured protesters – or Chow’s bereaved family – and remains completely unmoved by Hongkongers’ demands for government and police accountability, as well as universal suffrage.

Instead of measures that might help calm Hongkongers’ anger after Chow’s death, we have seen an upsurge of police violence. In the morning of November 11, a traffic police officer, unencumbered by any self-restraint, fired, without warning, live rounds at unarmed protesters at close range, critically wounding one.

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