Hong Kong protests: two men who took part in demonstration aimed at breaking PolyU siege plead guilty to rioting
- The two defendants, a construction worker and a clerk, admit to taking part in clashes with police on a major thoroughfare near the university
- The demonstration was an effort to give fellow anti-government protesters who were trapped on campus a window to escape

Two men who paralysed a major thoroughfare near Hong Kong Polytechnic University as police laid siege to anti-government protesters occupying the campus two years ago have pleaded guilty to rioting.
The District Court heard on Tuesday that the two accused were among 50 protesters who assembled beneath a section of the Gascoigne Flyover near the Diocesan Girls’ School in Jordan at 11.30am on November 18.
That day, protesters clashed with police near PolyU in an attempt to give their comrades – who had been trapped inside the red-brick campus for seven days – a window to escape.
Police had cordoned off the Gascoigne Flyover, which forms part of the West Kowloon Corridor, and fired tear gas to disperse the crowd, but to no avail.
Sze, who was carrying two knives and a hammer at the time, was spotted placing a plastic barrier in front of a police cordon on the road before being subdued at around 11.48am.

Man, the other suspect, was intercepted by police under the flyover one minute later. An officer subsequently found raw materials for making petrol bombs in Man’s possession.