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Hong Kong lawyers held a silent march in support of anti-government protesters on Wednesday, highlighting the movement's enduring broad appeal despite increasingly ominous warnings from Beijing.
Hundreds of lawyers, dressed in black, marched under the scorching sun from the city's highest court to the justice secretary's office.
The rally came as daily demonstrations have become increasingly violent and China ramped-up its warnings to protesters, saying on Tuesday that "Those who play with fire will perish by it".
The legal professionals who usually eschew demonstrations have now marched twice since early June.
"I really dislike how this government uses scaremongering and divisive tactics," senior counsel Anita Yip told AFP.
"They carry out prosecutions selectively... How would people still have confidence in the government?" she added, referring to the perceived different treatment given by police to protesters and their opponents, pro-government thugs with suspected triad links.
Hong Kong police have arrested more than 500 protesters and charged dozens with rioting, which carries a maximum ten years in jail.
But they have so far only arrested 19 men for last month's attacks on democracy protesters that hospitalised 45 people, and only on the less serious charge of unlawful Assembly.
They have also vowed to keep the movement going until their core demands are met, such as an independent inquiry into police tactics, a permanent withdrawal of the bill, amnesty for those arrested, and universal suffrage.
Tuesday march was a peaceful and now rare sight as Hong Kong buckles under increasingly violent clashes between protesters and police.
On Monday the city witnessed a rare general strike and the most widespread unrest in two months of demonstrations, with police firing 800 rounds of tear gas in a single day at a dozen locations.
"It's very important to show that there can be peaceful and effective demonstrations," said 77-year-old lawyer Warwick Haldane.
Some expressed sympathy with the more hardcore protesters battling police.
One man, wearing a suit, donned the protest movement's signature goggles, mask and a construction helmet.
Yip, the lawyer, said the broad consensus on the demand to set up an independent commission of inquiry should be respected as the city reels under its worst political crisis in decades with no exit ramp in sight.
"The only commonality appears to be holding a public inquiry. I know it may not be easy but (the government) needs to think about how to accomplish this," she said.
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