Protester Fell As Firefighters Moved In, Inquest Told

"); jQuery("#212 h3").html("

Related News Programmes

"); });

2021-05-13 HKT 18:13

Share this story

facebook

  • The inquest into the death of Marco Leung, 35, is expected to hear from former lawmaker Roy Kwong on Friday. File photo: RTHK

    The inquest into the death of Marco Leung, 35, is expected to hear from former lawmaker Roy Kwong on Friday. File photo: RTHK

A police officer has told an inquest that an anti-government protester fell to his death from a shopping mall in June 2019 when firefighters moved in on him from two different directions.

Superintendent Sean Lin, a team leader of the police’s negotiation team, said he had told Marco Leung, 35, that he would be coming closer to him to help him come down from a construction platform on the fourth floor of Pacific Place, and Leung did not object.

But Lin said as he walked up the stairs to approach Leung, he saw around three firefighters were also quickly approaching the protester from two sides of the platform.

All of a sudden, Leung grabbed a vertical bar on some scaffolding and crawled out, the police officer said.

He added that firefighters attempted to grab Leung’s arm, but somehow missed it, and the protester loosened his grip on the bar and fell to the ground below.

Lin said he could not tell whether Leung had started climbing out of the scaffolding after firefighters had begun closing in, or whether it was the other way round.

He noted that Leung had looked at his mobile for half a minute just before he made the sudden move, but he said he couldn't tell whether Leung had been provoked by something he saw on his phone.

Lin said Leung’s sudden action was out of his expectations, adding that he believed their communication had been moving in a positive direction. Leung had accepted a bottle of water from him, for example.

Lin said this was the first time he had encountered such an abrupt turn of events during his 20 years of negotiation work.

Earlier in Thursday's hearing, superintendent Nip Hoi-kwan, who had been at the scene to support the rescue operation, said former lawmaker Roy Kwong and a protester, Amy Pat, had approached him saying they wished to speak to Leung.

But the officer rejected their request, as the police negotiation team had already been trying to engage Leung. He said letting the pair speak to him could have complicated the situation.

He also said since Leung had been holding a box cutter, it would be risky to allow Kwong and Pat, who didn’t know the man personally, to approach him.

Kwong is expected to give testimony on Friday.

RECENT NEWS

HSBC Fined HK$4.2M Over Disclosure Breaches In Research Reports

The Securities and Futures Commission (SFC) has reprimanded and imposed a fine of HK$4.2 million on HSBC for breaching ... Read more

Philippines: The Hidden Fintech Gem You Cant Afford To Miss | Lito Villanueva

The Philippines is the fastest-growing digital economy and home to one of Southeast Asia’s most valuable fintech unic... Read more

SBI And Chainlink Partner On Blockchain And Digital Asset Use

SBI Group, one of Japan’s largest financial conglomerates with assets exceeding the equivalent of US$200 billion, has... Read more

China Considers Yuan-Backed Stablecoins To Advance Global Currency Push

China is considering permitting the use of yuan-backed stablecoins for the first time in a move that could support wide... Read more

Financial Sanctions: LSEG Risk Intelligence Answers Your Key Questions

Financial sanctions are essential government tools for achieving foreign policy objectives – and compliance is mandat... Read more

Korea Development Bank Leads $45M Bridge Round For Upstage

South Korea’s Upstage has secured a US$45 million Series B bridge round supported by Korea Development Bank (KDB), Am... Read more