Protesters gathered at Hong Kong airport Friday with banners denouncing the pro-Beijing government's stance, a move they said aimed to draw the world's attention to their two-month-old movement.

The protesters wore masks, wore helmets, dressed in black, and sat on the ground in the arrival hall, chanting slogans and banners to save Hong Kong from "tyranny, tyranny and police brutality" in both Chinese and English.

"Ask me about Hong Kong!" A number of protesters at the airport held up a banner reading in several languages. In an effort to introduce foreign tourists and visitors to what is happening in Hong Kong.

The protests continue for the tenth week in a row amid demonstrators' insistence on continuing to meet their demands, namely the resignation of Chief Executive Kari Lam, an independent police investigation, an amnesty for detainees, the introduction of universal suffrage, and the withdrawal of a bill allowing the local government to hand over criminal suspects to power. Central Chinese.

Although the local government suspended the bill to contain the anger of the street, the protesters are demanding its complete abolition, and the protest movement has widened after the government refused to cancel it.