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Shocking footage shows Hong Kong protestor shot at point-blank range

WARNING - GRAPHIC CONTENT: Police in Hong Kong shot a protester at very close range as demonstrators blocked subway lines and roads during the Monday morning commute in the city.

An online video shows a police officer collaring one protester and then shooting another who approaches. The officer fired again as a third protester approached.

Police said that only one protester was hit and is undergoing surgery.

The video was posted on Facebook by Cupid Producer, an outlet that started last year and appears to post mostly live videos related to local news.

The shooting – which has shocked people on social media – occurred at a crossing at a large intersection strewn with debris that had backed-up traffic in Sai Wan Ho, a neighbourhood on the eastern part of Hong Kong Island.

As demonstrations continue, protesters blocked intersections around the city this morning as skirmishes broke out between protesters and police.

Public broadcaster RTHK said that a fire was set inside a train at Kwai Fong station and services suspended at several stations.

A patch of what looked like dried blood could be seen in a cordoned-off area after the shooting, as angry onlookers shouted insults at the police.

Blood stains can be seen on the road where the shooting happened.
A bloody scene at the site where a pro-democracy protester was shot by a policeman. Source: Anthony Wallace/AFP

Masked protesters continued to try to block other intersections in the area, and police responded with pepper spray, hitting some bystanders as well.

On Sunday, police fired tear gas and protesters broke windows at a shopping mall in anti-government demonstrations across Hong Kong amid anger over a student activist’s death and the arrest of pro-democracy lawmakers.

Hong Kong is in the sixth month of protests that began over a proposed extradition law and have expanded to include demands for greater democracy and police accountability. Activists say Hong Kong’s autonomy and Western-style civil liberties, promised when the former British colony was returned to China in 1997, are eroding.

A protestor uses a fire extinguisher amid the chaos in Hong Kong.
University students and protesters react after police fire tear gas to the campus of the Hong Kong Polytechnic University on Monday. Source: Philip Fong/Getty

The territory is preparing for district council elections on November 24 that are viewed as a measure of public sentiment toward the government.

Pro-democracy lawmakers accuse the government of trying to provoke violence to justify canceling or postponing the elections.

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