The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Pro-democracy leaders in court in Hong Kong

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HONG KONG: Founders of Hong Kong’s pro-democracy movement that sparked mass rallies in 2014 appeared in court yesterday in the latest case brought against activists.

The nine defendants face public nuisance charges related to the Umbrella Movement demonstrat­ions, which shut down several major roads in the semiautono­mous Chinese city for 79 days.

Hong Kong’s government has brought a raft of protestrel­ated cases against democracy campaigner­s in the past few months. Supporters of the activists see them as political prosecutio­ns under pressure from an increasing­ly assertive China.

The most high-profile case so far saw the jailing of leading student activists including Joshua Wong.

The founders of the protest campaign known as Occupy Central with Love and Peace, Benny Tai, Chan Kin-man and Reverend Chu Yiu-ming, were among the nine who appeared yesterday.

Their campaign galvanised momentum behind the idea of a mass protest in the heart of Hong Kong to put pressure on Beijing and the local government to introduce democratic reforms.

After student groups joined the campaign and police fired tear gas to disperse protesters, it exploded into the Umbrella Movement.

Defence lawyers at a pre-trial review yesterday questioned why the three Occupy founders faced separate charges of conspiracy to commit public nuisance, incitement to commit public nuisance and incitement to incite public nuisance.

Lawyer Gerard McCoy told the court it was “prosecutio­n overload... unnecessar­ily and artificial­ly bringing charges to increase pressure on the defendants”.

He said a more appropriat­e charge would be unauthoris­ed assembly, which carries a lesser sentence. Public nuisance charges carry a maximum sentence of seven years. The other six defendants, including serving pro-democracy lawmaker Tanya Chan, face either one or two public nuisance charges.

Prosecutor David Leung said the offences were ‘separate and distinct’ and the prosecutio­n would not change its position.

Other leading pro-democracy campaigner­s were in the packed court to support the defendants.

Dozens of supporters outside shouted ‘Shame on political prosecutio­n!’ and ‘The Umbrella Movement is innocent!’

Lawmaker Chan said she had confidence in the judicial system.— AFP

 ??  ?? Occupy Central civil disobedien­ce founders, (from left) Chan Kin-man, Benny Tai and Reverend Chu Yiu-ming leave the court after a pre-trial hearing.— Reuters photo
Occupy Central civil disobedien­ce founders, (from left) Chan Kin-man, Benny Tai and Reverend Chu Yiu-ming leave the court after a pre-trial hearing.— Reuters photo

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