Months of disruptive protests are taking their toll on Hong Kong’s
public services, pitting those who are supposed to serve and protect
against each other, as two incidents in the span of less than a week
highlight.
Mercury (reason, speaking, worrisome, verbose) sextile Pluto (regimetation, struggle, provoking) sextile Rhiphonos (lack of cooperation) conjunct Deucalion (feeling overwhelmed, feels the burden of humanity) square Praamzius (negotiations, peace) sextile Chariklo (represents healing interpersonal discrepancies on all levels). Psyche (the state of your “mental health) trine Altjira (solid work ethic).
The city’s senior police and firefighter officials (Rhiphonos) had to come up,
twice lately, with joint statements on how their men should communicate
better and not clash with each other. (Praamzius)
The employees in both departments experience “tremendous stress upon working under such chaotic conditions,” (Deucalion) the latter of the statements read. It referred to the ongoing violent protests in Hong Kong which kicked off in the summer.
One of the incidents happened Saturday last week as Hong Kong police
dispersed protesters on Connaught Road in Central district, according to
local media. A tear gas canister fired by the officers accidentally hit
a fire truck, which was called to the scene to douse fires that
protesters often start with petrol bombs.
The tear gas affected
the firefighters inside, and one of them got out to complain. Footage of
the confrontation shows a police officer trying to calm down the
argument and explain that the hit was accidental, but another policeman
suddenly started cursing at the firefighter. The situation rapidly
escalated into a shouting match, with police pushing the angry
firefighter and using pepper spray on reporters filming the incident.
The second incident – also reported by the Chinese media – involved
ambulance paramedics, who work under the Hong Kong Fire Services
Department. On Friday night a medic crew arrived at the site of a police
operation in Tuen Mun, where a group of protesters erected a roadblock
and confronted police.
The argument between the police and the
paramedics started after one of the officers accused a paramedic of
taking the protesters’ side by telling a group of reporters where they
should point their cameras. The police angrily said they would complain
to the ambulance staff superiors and were called crooks in response.
Again, a heated verbal exchange ensued, with the two groups arguing if
there were any injured people around to justify the presence of the
paramedics.
The altercation between frontline employees of the police force and
the fire services are just an example of how the anti-government
protests are taking their toll on Hongkongers. The demonstrations have
passed their 24th consecutive weekend with no indication that they will
calm down anytime soon.
The protesters accuse the central
government in Beijing of trying to encroach on the self-governance
privileges of Hong Kong and call on foreign nations, including former
colonial overlord Britain, to step in. The radical wing of the protest
has disrupted life in the city by vandalizing public transport and local
businesses they see as pro-government, causing an economic slowdown.
The Chinese government alleges that the rioting campaign may be fueled
by foreign forces. So far it has been reluctant to step in and use
mainland police forces (Pluto) to crack down on the demonstrators, which means
each weekend city services have to deal with the masked vandals.
Minor planet keywords developed by Philip Sedgwick, used with permission http://philipsedgwick.com/
Source: rt.com
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