By Agence France-PresseÂ
"Grandpa Wong" holds a cane held above his head as he pleads with riot police to stop firing tear gas -- 85-year-old shielding protesters on the front lines of Hong Kong's fight for democracy.
'Grandpa Wong' is a regular sight at Hong Kong's street battles. (AFP / VIVEK PRAKASH / MANILA BULLETIN)
Despite his age, Wong is a regular sight at Hong Kong's street battles, hobbling towards police lines, placing himself in between riot officers and hardcore protesters, hoping to de-escalate what has now become near-daily clashes.
"I'd rather they kill the elderly than hit the youngsters," he told AFP during a recent series of skirmishes in the shopping district of Causeway Bay, a gas mask dangling from his chin.
"We're old now, but the children are the future of Hong Kong."
The three months of huge, sometimes violent pro-democracy protests in the semi-autonomous Chinese city are overwhelmingly youth-led.
Research by academics has shown that half of those on the streets are between 20 and 30 years old, while 77 percent have degrees.
But the movement maintains widespread support across the public with lawyers, doctors, nurses, teachers, and civil servants all holding recent solidarity rallies, even as the violence escalates.
Groups of elderly people -- dubbed "silver hairs" -- have also marched.
But Wong and his friend "Grandpa Chan", a comparatively spry 73-year-old, are among the most pro-active of this older generation.
The two are part of a group called "Protect the Children", made up of mostly senior citizens and volunteers.
Almost every weekend, they come out to try to mediate between police and demonstrators, as well as buy protesters time when the cops start to charge.
'Grandpa Wong' is a regular sight at Hong Kong's street battles. (AFP / VIVEK PRAKASH / MANILA BULLETIN)
Despite his age, Wong is a regular sight at Hong Kong's street battles, hobbling towards police lines, placing himself in between riot officers and hardcore protesters, hoping to de-escalate what has now become near-daily clashes.
"I'd rather they kill the elderly than hit the youngsters," he told AFP during a recent series of skirmishes in the shopping district of Causeway Bay, a gas mask dangling from his chin.
"We're old now, but the children are the future of Hong Kong."
The three months of huge, sometimes violent pro-democracy protests in the semi-autonomous Chinese city are overwhelmingly youth-led.
Research by academics has shown that half of those on the streets are between 20 and 30 years old, while 77 percent have degrees.
But the movement maintains widespread support across the public with lawyers, doctors, nurses, teachers, and civil servants all holding recent solidarity rallies, even as the violence escalates.
Groups of elderly people -- dubbed "silver hairs" -- have also marched.
But Wong and his friend "Grandpa Chan", a comparatively spry 73-year-old, are among the most pro-active of this older generation.
The two are part of a group called "Protect the Children", made up of mostly senior citizens and volunteers.
Almost every weekend, they come out to try to mediate between police and demonstrators, as well as buy protesters time when the cops start to charge.