Hong Kong protests: man who threatened group with 15cm knife jailed while police arrest five linked to firebomb attack on Kowloon Tong MTR station
- West Kowloon Court hears Choi Pei-tak threatened protesters with blade during chaotic scenes in Tung Chung in September
- Transport worker was angered after witnessing friend’s wife being harassed by protesters following dispute, court told

A Hong Kong man who chased a group of protesters while wielding a knife was on Wednesday jailed for nine months.
West Kowloon Court heard Choi Pei-tak, 45, intimidated about 20 black-clad protesters by pointing and waving a 15cm blade at them at around 6pm outside Yat Tung Estate bus terminus in Tung Chung on September 1.
That day, protesters had blocked roads and vandalised the railway station in the northern Lantau Island town, paralysing traffic to the airport.
Choi, a transport worker and local resident, initially denied one count of possessing an offensive weapon in a public place, but opted to plead guilty just before his trial. The offence carries a maximum prison term of three years.

Magistrate Winnie Lau Yee-wan said the defendant’s act was an apparent threat to public safety, which guaranteed a deterrent sentence.