Medics delayed by Hong Kong police officer in Prince Edward MTR incident: Fire service

Medics delayed by Hong Kong police officer in Prince Edward MTR incident: Fire service

HONG KONG: A Hong Kong police officer had delayed paramedics responding to reports of injured people..

HONG KONG: A Hong Kong police officer had delayed paramedics responding to reports of injured people at Prince Edward MTR station on Aug 31, the Fire Services Department said on Thursday (Sep 12).

Deputy chief ambulance officer Tsang Man-ha gave a detailed account of the night to reporters at a press conference on Thursday. She said paramedics could not enter the station because it was on lockdown and they were forced to use another entrance.

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Once there, they were told by a police officer that there were no casualties inside the station.

Police said at a separate press conference that there had been a communication problem and that the police officer who stop paramedics from going into the station might not have known about the situation inside.

The paramedics were finally allowed in at around 12.30am – about 15 minutes after they were stopped by the police officer.

INJURIES AT PRINCE EDWARD STATION

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Riot police had stormed trains at Prince Edward MTR station in Mong Kok, making several arrests and deploying pepper spray after protesters rushed into the station on the night of Aug 31.

READ: Hong Kong MTR releases CCTV pictures to address rumours over Prince Edward station 'death'

CCTV image showing riot police at platform 3 of Prince Edward station. (Image: MTR Corporation)

The incident has been in the spotlight after rumours circulated online that three protesters died during the police operation – a claim the authorities have repeatedly denied.

CCTV pictures were released by MTR Corporation on Tuesday in an attempt to quell the rumours, saying their records showed that no one had died in the station that night.

Two hours after police arrived, seven injured people were evacuated using a non-passenger train from Prince Edward station to Lai Chi Kok station, where they were then taken to hospital for treatment, according to MTR's timeline.

At a joint press conference with the police and fire service on Tuesday, MTR said the train was arranged at the police's request.

“It is impossible for us to leave the scene without taking good care of injured citizens,” said deputy chief fire officer Derek Armstrong Chan at the press conference on Thursday.

“We did not see anyone die that night. This is the assurance the Fire Services Department gives to Hong Kong citizens.”

Commentary: All this fury but Hong Kongs symbols of wealth have been untouched

READ: From Singa

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