Workers moved in to clear Hong Kong’s pro-democracy occupation from the streets on Thursday amid a heavy police presence following a 10-week occupation and a final night time rally that brought thousands on to the streets. There was no immediate sign of resistance as teams began to dismantle barricades at Admiralty and authorities issued a final warning to leave or face arrest. Police had earlier warned the thousand or so people who remained that they would lock down the area and clear the site, with broadcasters announcing the imminent clearance of a secondary, much smaller protest zone at Causeway Bay. Workers and police removed occupiers from a site at Mong Kok in late November. The dismantling of the Admiralty site appeared to mark the end of the occupation, which at its peak brought tens of thousands on to the streets in an unprecedented outburst of civil disobedience. But student leaders and other participants have made it clear they plan to keep up the pressure for greater political rights through as-yet unspecified tactics. The atmosphere was relatively sombre on Thursday morning, in comparison to the festive scenes the previous night when as many as 10,000 flocked to what they assumed was…