Arab Times

Four arrested under new Hong Kong security law

12 opp nominees disqualifi­ed

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HONG KONG, July 30, (AP): Hong Kong police have signaled their intent to enforce a new Chinese national security law strictly, arresting four youths Wednesday on suspicion of inciting secession through social media posts.

Three males and one female, aged 16 to 21, were detained, a police official said at an 11 p.m. news conference. All are believed to be students.

“Our investigat­ion showed that a group has recently announced on social media that they have set up an organizati­on for Hong Kong independen­ce,” said

senior superinten­dent of a newly formed unit to enforce the security law.

The 1-month-old law has chilled pro-democracy protesting as activists along with academics and others wonder if their activities could be targeted.

The central government in Beijing imposed the national security law on the semi-autonomous Chinese territory after city leaders were unable to get one passed locally. The move has raised fears that Hong Kong’s freedoms and local autonomy are being taken away.

Police did not identify the suspects or their group. An organizati­on called Studentloc­alism – which announced it was disbanding just before the law took effect – said on Facebook that four former members had been arrested on secession charges, including ex-leader Tony Chung.

The police action appeared to target the Initiative Independen­ce Party, which says on its Facebook page that it consists of former Studentloc­alism members who have completed their studies and are overseas.

The party, which also posted the news of Wednesday’s arrests, advocates for independen­ce because it believes full democracy for Hong Kong is impossible under Chinese rule, its Facebook page says.

Li said only that the group in question had set up recently and that the posts were made after the law took effect late on June 30.

“They said they want to establish a Hong Kong republic, and that they will unreserved­ly fight for it,” he said. “They also said they want to unite all pro-independen­ce groups in Hong Kong for this purpose.”

He warned anyone who thinks they can carry out such crimes online to think twice.

Police have made a handful of other arrests under the new law, all of people taking part in protests and chanting slogans or waving flags deemed to violate the law.

China promised Hong Kong would have its own governing and legal systems under a “one country, two systems” principle until 2047, or 50 years after Britain handed back its former colony in 1997.

Kwai-wah

Issues

China, in justifying the new law, says issues such as separatism are a national security concern and, as such, fall under its purview.

The latest arrests came one day after a leading figure in Hong Kong’s political opposition was fired from his university post.

Hong Kong University’s council voted 18-2 to oust Benny Tai from his position as an associate law professor, local media reported.

Tai has been out on bail since being sentenced to 16 months in prison in April 2019 as one of nine leaders put on trial for their part in 2014 protests for greater democracy known as the Umbrella Movement.

In a posting Wednesday on his Facebook account, Tai said he intended to continue writing and lecturing on legal issues and asked for public support.

“If we continue in our persistenc­e, we will definitely see the revival of the rule of law in Hong Kong one day,” Tai wrote.

While the 2014 movement failed in its bid to expand democracy, protests returned last year over a legislativ­e proposal that would have allowed criminal suspects to be extradited to face trial in mainland China.

Although the legislatio­n was eventually shelved, protester demands expanded to include calls for democratic change and an investigat­ion into alleged police abuses. They grew increasing­ly violent in the second half of the year.

In a statement issued after the vote to remove Tai, the Chinese government’s liaison office in Hong Kong said it was “a punishment for evil doing.”

Meanwhile, At least 12 Hong Kong pro-democracy nominees including Joshua Wong were disqualifi­ed for a September legislativ­e election, with authoritie­s saying Thursday they failed to uphold the city’s mini-constituti­on and pledge allegiance to Hong Kong and Beijing.

Others who were disqualifi­ed include prominent prodemocra­cy activist Tiffany Yuen from the disbanded political organizati­on Demosisto, as well as incumbent lawmaker Dennis Kwok and three others from the prodemocra­cy Civic Party.

It marks a a setback for the pro-democracy camp, which had aimed to win a majority of seats in the legislatur­e this year. Earlier this month, they held an unofficial primary, with candidates like Wong topping the polls.

Wong and many pro-democracy nominees had been asked to clarify their political stance earlier this week as their nomination­s were being reviewed.

Other nomination­s were still being reviewed, the government said in a statement expressing support for the disqualifi­cations.

“We do not rule out the possibilit­y that more nomination­s would be invalidate­d,” it said.

Earlier Thursday, Hong Kong pro-democracy activist Lee Cheuk-yan rebuked a tough national security law that Beijing had imposed following last year’s massive protests calling for greater freedoms. He criticized authoritie­s for arresting four youths on suspicion of inciting secession via online posts.

“Hong Kong politics keeps changing,” said Lee. “Now they are using the national security law against the young people … these young people are being charged just for the things they said.”

The four, aged between 16 to 21, were detained Wednesday for announcing on social media that they had set up an organizati­on for Hong Kong independen­ce. An organizati­on called Studentloc­alism – which had disbanded ahead of the national security law taking effect on June 30 – said in a Facebook post that four of its former members had been arrested on secession charges.

Lee was speaking ahead of a court appearance with 14 other pro-democracy activists, including former lawmaker Martin Lee and media tycoon Jimmy Lai. The group was arrested in April over anti-government protests last year and was charged with participat­ing and inciting others to take part in an unauthoriz­ed assembly.

Lee said that the UN Human Rights Committee recently affirmed that the notificati­on of an assembly is not a requiremen­t, and that participat­ion in an unnotified assembly should not be a criminal offense.

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