Protesters have shut down central areas of the southern Chinese city with a mass sit-in, including outside the city's legislative assembly, and have given Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying until midnight to step down, or face escalated action.
China backed the city's embattled leader saying it was behind Leung "firmly and unshakably" and pledged support for the police as protesters prepared for a fifth night on the barricades.
Last month China said Hong Kongers would be able to vote for their next leader in 2017 but only those vetted by a loyalist committee would be allowed to stand -- something demonstrators have dismissed as a "fake democracy".
The city authorities today said they wanted the streets cleared around the government headquarters with more than 3,000 civil servants expected to return to the headquarters after a two-day public holiday.
The late afternoon resupply by police officers caused widespread alarm among protesters as their leaders issuing fresh calls for people to swell their ranks.
Pictures shared widely on social media and television showed one barrel with the words "Round, 38mm rubber baton multi" written on it. Another had "1.5 in, CS" emblazoned on it, a possible reference to CS gas.
"I am worried that the police will use force to disperse the movement tonight," Andrew Shum, a member of Occupy Central, one of the main protest groups, told AFP. "Everyone is discussing what they are going to do next."
An editorial in the Communist Party mouthpiece the People's Daily today warned against chaos in the city adding Beijing supported "the police of the special territory in handling these illegal protests according to the law".
Beijing's latest comments came after China's foreign minister issued a stern warning to the United States not to meddle in its "internal affairs".
The demonstrators consider Leung a Beijing stooge and protest leaders want today's ultimatum to be met.
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