Protesters in Hong Kong rally chant on the streets - but demonstration remains peaceful

Medical tents are set up amid concerns about potential violence, as people demand democratic reforms.

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Hong Kong's 'David and Goliath' fight
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Hundreds of thousands of protesters have made their way through the streets of Hong Kong chanting anti-government slogans.

The words "SS Nazi" were scrawled on walls in the city and the marches follow hours of gatherings at the city's Victoria Park and surrounding streets.

Sunday's pro-democracy demonstration stayed peaceful, with organisers estimating that at least 1.7 million people took part.

Sky News correspondent Diana Magnay, who is in Hong Kong, said earlier: "There must be a million-plus on the streets."

She added: "They've been saying 'an eye for an eye' all week, in reference to a girl who was shot by police in the eye.

"And you can walk through this whole city, with people chanting support for democracy."

People with umbrellas up filling a street in Hong Kong
Image: People with umbrellas up filling a street in Hong Kong

A couple of underground stations were closed to prevent overcrowding because so many people turned out.

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Many of them are wore black and carrying umbrellas, which have become a symbol of the protests.

Protesters gathered at Victoria Park
Image: Many protesters wore black

Drenched by heavy rain, they chanted "cheer for Hong Kong" and "free Hong Kong".

Medical tents were set up amid concerns about potential violence.

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Goggles and masks were handed out, as well as saline solution, to counter the effects of tear gas.

:: There is a palpable sense of shame in Hong Kong

Magnay said the protests were an "extremely powerful message of support for democracy".

She added that it was a "very strong indication of how much popular support there still is for the protest movement".

Protesters gather in Victoria Park
Image: Protesters gathered in Victoria Park

Kiki Ma, a 28-year-old accountant taking part in the protest, said peace was the "number one priority today", adding: "We want to show that we aren't like the government."

Before the rallies began, activist Joshua Wong told Sky News that it was a battle of "David versus Goliath".

A protester holds a poster near the Causeway Bay station
Image: A protester holds a poster near the Causeway Bay station

With Beijing moving troops to the border, he said he hoped that China's President Xi would realise that potentially sending troops into Hong Kong was "not the way out".

"People really worry about the next Tiananmen Square massacre," he added.

The protesters are fighting for the "fundamental right" to elect their own government, he said.

There is a palpable sense of shame in Hong Kong
There is a palpable sense of shame in Hong Kong

There's a long way to go between threatening rhetoric and police exercises at the border, and an actual intervention

The demonstration was led by the Civil Human Rights Front, which organised marches in June that attracted a million people.

Organiser Bonnie Leung said the police would be to blame if chaos ensued.

She added that it was a "day of peace" and that "we hope we can show the world that Hong Kong people can be totally peaceful".

Why are people protesting in Hong Kong?
Why are people protesting in Hong Kong?

Protests have been going on in Hong Kong for months. But why did they start and when will they end?

There was a brief stand-off on Saturday night between police and protesters outside a police station in the Mong Kok district. No tear gas was used but officers said they fired one baton round.

Initially, the demonstrations were over a now-suspended bill that would allow criminal suspects in Hong Kong to be extradited to mainland China.

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Chinese army on alert for further Hong Kong protests

But broader concerns about the erosion of freedoms under the "one country, two systems" formula - enacted after Britain handed Hong Kong back to China in 1997 - are now part of a series of concerns.

The protesters want democratic reforms and the city's Beijing-backed leader, Carrie Lam, to resign.