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653 ¹ø ±Û : For the police, this has all been genuinely tough
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 For the police, this has all been genuinely tough. Officers have to put in at least 15 hours a day. Riot gear is heavy and it's 
exhausting to run around in the scorching sun. Policemen and their families have been doxxed - meaning their personal 
information has been leaked online - many feel this is just for doing their job. They face hatred just as much as they are 
accused of fuelling it.
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How is Hong Kong run?
Seven ways China's media took on HK protests
Nonetheless, Derek feels there are no excuses for the unruly behaviour of police officers caught on camera beating protesters 
or opening fire: "Frontline officers have no restraint and use excessive force," he says.
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He disapproves of unquestioning loyalty within the police force - but he thinks the same thing is happening among protesters. 
He can't accept any assault on people of different political persuasions.
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"I asked my pro-protest friends if they would distance themselves from this - all of them said no," Derek says.
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So he doesn't know where he stands in this new Hong Kong.

"He said I should follow Hong Kong's rules. He also told me to get back to where I come from."
For mainland-born Benjamin, the protests have finally made him consider himself a Hongkonger - after more than a decade.
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On 16 June he spent five hours marching from Victoria Park to Admiralty by himself - a march that protesters said was 
attended by two million people.
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"I am proud of this city," Benjamin says. He was touched by the resolve of the peaceful marchers.

But he is at odds with the community known as gang piao - (a Mandarin term which means Hong Kong drifters). These are 
the well-educated Chinese elites who move to Hong Kong. Every year, the government accepts 20,000 such "drifters", often 
scorned by locals for taking jobs.

"I can say 99 out of 100 drifters see their Chinese identity as unassailable," Benjamin says, and that they see a distinct Hong 
Kong identity as unacceptable.
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Many mainlanders feel they have dedicated themselves to the city, but are suspected of just being "brainwashed" 
automatons. They cannot help but wonder if a touch of xenophobia is involved, even from people who they believe to be of 
their "own kind" - another example of how complex identity and allegiances are. 
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