Hong Kong pro-democracy protest organizers on Sunday called for the police chief and the security secretary to resign over their conduct toward activists, as the city experiences an 11th straight weekend of demonstrations, CNN reports.
What's new: Organizers say 1.7 million people took part in Sunday's peaceful mass protest in Hong Kong, though police are still surveying their own crowd estimates. Thousands still occupied the roads into the night outside the government headquarters in the Admiralty district.
Britain faces shortages of fuel, food and medicine and a likely hard border in Ireland if there's a no-deal Brexit on Oct. 31, according to U.K. government documents leaked to the Sunday Times.
Why it matters: The Cabinet Office forecast outlines the most likely aftershocks of a no-deal Brexit rather than a worst-case scenario, according to the news outlet.
Hong Kong businesses are questioning if the city is safe after almost 3 months of protests, while others are being advised to create contingency plans if unrest continues, the BBC reports.
The big picture: Hong Kong's stock market is the 5th largest in the world, when considering the value of its traded companies. As of July, financial analysts said the territory's market hadn't yet suffered serious consequences — but regulatory changes caused by protests would be a different story entirely.