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This Article is From Oct 18, 2014

American Photojournalist, Arrested During Hong Kong Protest, Bailed

American Photojournalist, Arrested During Hong Kong Protest, Bailed
Protesters cheer after riot police withdraw at a main road in the Mong Kok district of Hong Kong. (Associated Press)
Hong Kong: An American photojournalist who was arrested in Hong Kong for standing on a car while covering clashes between pro-democracy protesters and police there was bailed on Saturday.

Getty Images agency photographer Paula Bronstein was arrested on Friday night amid confrontations between police and demonstrators.

Ms Bronstein said she was pushed against the car as violent scuffles broke out around her in the bustling Mongkok district, one of the main sites for the demonstrations that have paralysed parts of the financial hub over the last three weeks.

Twenty-six people were arrested during the fracas in total, police said.

"I don't know why it (the arrest) even happened at all, I don't really understand it. I've never been arrested before in my life," Ms Bronstein told AFP.

Cable Television footage showed the car Ms Bronstein stood on was a black Mercedes-Benz.

A police statement published on Saturday said a foreign woman had been arrested for "suspicion of criminal damage" and that the driver of the car had filed a complaint.

"The driver of the car said there was damage and requested the police to handle the incident," the statement said without further detail.

"I'm wearing sneakers, I'm not wearing army boots, I don't weigh 300 pounds, I'm a very petite woman," Ms Bronstein said.

She was released on a HK$300 ($38.67) bail and told to report back to the police at the end of the month.

The Foreign Correspondents' Club late on Friday condemned Ms Bronstein's arrest and said other journalists were also threatened while covering the Mongkok clashes.

The Asian financial hub has been rocked by demonstrations calling for free elections and the resignation of the city's leader.

Protesters have held sit-ins at three major intersections, including in Mongkok, causing significant disruption to a city usually known for its stability.

China has insisted that the city's leader must be vetted by a committee expected to be stacked with Beijing loyalists before standing for election in 2017, a proposal protesters have dismissed as "fake democracy".

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