The Chronicle Herald (Metro)

Hong Kong arrests 53 for plot to ‘overthrow’ government

- YANNI CHOW YOYO CHOW

HONG KONG — Hong Kong police arrested 53 people in dawn raids on democracy activists on Wednesday in the biggest crackdown since China last year imposed a security law which opponents say is aimed at quashing dissent in the former British colony.

Hong Kong's most prominent pro-democracy advocates were arrested in raids on 72 premises as the authoritie­s said last year's unofficial vote to choose opposition candidates in city elections was part of a plan to "overthrow" the government.

The arrests were linked to an unpreceden­ted, independen­tly organised and non-binding vote to select opposition candidates for a since-postponed legislativ­e election.

About 1,000 police took part in the raids, which included searches of the offices of a pollster and a law firm.

"The Chinese Communist Party has further turned the screw in Hong Kong," said Chris Patten, the last British governor of Hong Kong. "Liberal democracie­s around the world must continue to speak out against the brutal destructio­n of a free society."

Patten said the West should get tougher with China and scolded the European Commission for seeking a trade deal with Beijing.

"We should not be seeking to contain China but to constrain the Chinese Communist Party," Patten said.

Hong Kong Secretary for Security John Lee said those arrested had planned to cause "serious damage" to society and that authoritie­s would not tolerate subversive acts.

"The operation today targets the active elements who are suspected to be involved in the crime of overthrowi­ng or interferin­g seriously to destroy the Hong Kong government's legal execution of duties," Lee told reporters.

The arrests will further raise alarm that Hong Kong has taken a swift authoritar­ian turn.

Critics say the June 2020 security law crushes widerangin­g freedoms promised when the city returned to Chinese rule in 1997 and the arrests place China further on a collision course with the United States just as Joe Biden prepares to take over the presidency.

The White House did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment. Biden's pick for secretary of state, Antony Blinken, said on Twitter the arrests were "an assault on those bravely advocating for universal rights".

"The mass arrest of politician­s and activists in Hong Kong is a grievous attack on Hong Kong's rights and freedoms as protected under the Joint Declaratio­n," British Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab said, adding that China had deliberate­ly misled the world about its security law.

Beijing's top representa­tive office in Hong Kong said in a statement it firmly supported the arrests. Members of the democratic camp held a news conference to call for the release of "political prisoners".

Police did not name those arrested, but their identities were revealed by their social media accounts and their organisati­ons. They included former lawmakers, activists and people involved in organising the 2020 primaries, among them James To, Lam Cheuk-ting, Benny Tai and Lester Shum.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada