WELLINGTON, Nov. 16 (Xinhua) -- A rioting crowd
trashed property in central Nuku'alofa, capital of Tonga, Thursday afternoon.
The crowd left the central supermarket Molisi Tonga
in a tangled mess of broken glass and the streets smelling of spilled beer as
looters joined rioters in a spree of destruction shortly after 3:30 p.m. local
time (2:30 GMT), said a staff of the Chinese Embassy in Tonga.
Shocked staff at Molisi Tonga opposite the central
Talamahu Market were left surveying the wreckage as police are now taking
control of the area.
People threw stones at the Prime Minister's office,
and they also threw stones at the cabinet office. They turned over police
vehicles and vehicles of the prime minister's office.
There was a call from Chinese owner of a store in the
downtown saying the looters had caused damage to his store, a staff of Chinese
Embassy told Xinhua.
There are about 500 Chinese living in Nuku' alofa.
Radio New Zealand International said the riot erupted
after the government refused to approve reforms immediately.
Pro-democracy campaigners want the Assembly to vote
for political reform before parliament closes for the year Thursday.
The activists have been camped outside the Assembly
to push for a binding vote that full democratic reforms will be enacted ahead of
the 2008 elections.
The demand is being resisted by the government which
says such change cannot be made before 2009.
An archipelago of more than 170 islands spread over
an area of the South Pacific roughly the size of Japan, Tonga is the last
Polynesian monarchy.