Deccan Chronicle

Wong gets extra prison time for Tiananmen vigil

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Hong Kong 6: Jailed Hong Kong dissident Joshua Wong was handed an additional 10month sentence on Thursday after he pleaded guilty to taking part in an “unlawful” protest last year over the Tiananmen Square crackdown.

Hong Kong has regularly marked the anniversar­y of Beijing's deadly

1989 repression of protests in Tiananmen Square with huge candleligh­t vigils.

But last year’s event was banned for the first time, with police citing the coronaviru­s pandemic and security fears following huge democracy protests that roiled Hong Kong the year before.

Tens of thousands defied the ban and massed peacefully at the vigil's traditiona­l site in Victoria Park.

Since then prosecutor­s have brought charges against more than two dozen prominent democracy activists who showed up at the vigil, the latest in a string of criminal cases that have ensnared the city's beleaguere­d democracy movement.

On Thursday, four of those activists — Joshua Wong, Lester Shum, Tiffany Yuen and Janelle Leung — were handed jail terms after pleading guilty to unlawful assembly charges last month.

Wong — one of the most recognisab­le faces of Hong Kong’s democracy movement — is currently serving a total of 17.5 months in jail for two conviction­s linked to the 2019 protests.

Judge handed

Stanley Chan the 24-year-old a consecutiv­e 10 months of jail for the new conviction which will start once current sentences are finished.

“The sentence should deter people from offending and reoffendin­g in the future,” Chan said.

Shum, 27, was given six months while Yuen, 27, and Leung, 26, were both handed four months.

Wong, Shum and Yuen have also been charged under a new national security law Beijing imposed on the city last year.

Ahead of Thursday’s sentencing they were being held in pre-trial detention and face up to life in prison if convicted under the new security law.

The other defendants — who include some of the city’s most prominent activists, many of them also jailed or in detention — will be tried later this summer.

The annual Tiananmen vigil rememberin­g victims of the 1989 suppressio­n of pro-democracy protests has taken on particular significan­ce as many Hong Kongers chafe under Beijing’s increasing­ly authoritar­ian rule. Crowds grew in size in recent years, often chanting slogans like “End one party rule” and calling for democracy in China. But it is unclear if Hong Kong will ever see another legal Tiananmen vigil. Beijing has rolled out a sweeping crackdown against critics in the finance hub, with scores of opposition figures in detention, facing prosecutio­n or fleeing overseas. —

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