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ABC News
ABC News
Politics

Rival protesters clash at pro-Hong Kong rallies in Melbourne and Adelaide

A pro-Hong Kong rally in Melbourne's CBD turned violent as hundreds of demonstrators clashed with more than 100 pro-China protesters.

The protest began about 7:00pm on Friday outside the State Library Victoria, with only two police officers on the scene.

The crowd quickly swelled to an estimated 600 people before scuffles broke out and police formed a line separating the groups.

An ABC News crew became caught up in the scuffle when a speaker was pushed onto a cameraman by one of the protesters.

When the cameraman filmed the man who had kicked the speaker stand over, the protester lashed out and attempted to stop the cameraman from filming him.

Clashes between protesters continued throughout the night and Victoria Police told the ABC that two men were interviewed in relation to unlawful assault, before being released pending summons.

There were no injuries reported during the event.

Meanwhile in Adelaide, up to 80 pro-Hong Kong protesters visited the city campus of the University of South Australia on Friday afternoon.

The protest became quite heated when more than 100 pro-Chinese demonstrators arrived, one of them claiming a pro-Hong Kong protester had put a hand on a female member of their group.

Many supporters of China yelled, booed and hurled derogatory and sexist insults at the leaders of the pro-democracy movement as they spoke against Hong Kong's controversial extradition treaty and police brutality.

A police line was formed between the two groups who organisers said remained at the scene for longer than anticipated.

The pro-Hong Kong protesters made it clear to their group that they did not want anyone leaving alone, because of fears pro-Chinese protesters would follow them home and threaten violence.

In Sydney, nearly 500 people attended the rally held at Martin Place, over three times more than the organisers expected.

The rally was for the most part calm except for when about 20 pro-Beijing protesters arrived and started vocalising their opposition.

Police quickly moved them along and pushed them back to the other side of Martin Place.

The crowds were dispersed about 7:45pm and pro-Hong Kong organisers thanked NSW Police for overseeing the rally.

Similar protests were held in major cities across the country including Brisbane.

There were no arrests.

The protests come after student demonstrations between the pro-Hong Kong and pro-Beijing camps have seen confrontations over the past fortnight, ranging from scuffles at the University of Queensland to peaceful hours-long debates on the footpaths outside Monash University's Clayton campus in Melbourne.

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