The Star Malaysia

Killer willing to face Taiwan law

Man who triggered HK protests ‘sorry for causing trouble’

-

HONG KONG: A man who inadverten­tly triggered Hong Kong’s huge protests after he murdered his girlfriend in Taiwan has agreed to return to the island to face justice, a clergyman who has visited him in prison said.

Chan Tong-kai, 20, is wanted in Taiwan for the murder of his pregnant girlfriend during a holiday the two Hong Kongers took there in February last year.

He fled back to the southern Chinese city, where Taiwanese police were unable to apprehend him as there is no extraditio­n agreement between the two territorie­s.

The case triggered an ill-fated proposal by Hong Kong’s pro-Beijing government to ram through a sweeping extraditio­n Bill, which would have allowed the city to extradite suspects to any territory, including the authoritar­ian mainland.

The proposal sparked a massive public backlash with record-breaking crowds hitting the streets.

The protests have since snowballed as the movement seeks greater democracy and police accountabi­lity after Beijing and local leaders took a hard line and violence escalated.

Now the man who set off this tumultuous chain of events has indicated that he is willing to go to Taiwan for prosecutio­n.

Chan is currently serving a short jail sentence in Hong Kong after he was convicted earlier this year of stealing his girlfriend Poon Hiuwing’s possession­s during a trial in which he did not dispute murdering her.

He is due for release next week. Reverend Peter Koon, an Anglican clergyman, has visited him regularly in prison and said on Friday that he was willing to hand himself over to Taiwanese authoritie­s.

“I believe he will keep his word,” Koon said, adding that Chan had instructed a team of Taiwanese lawyers and had converted to Christiani­ty in prison.

“He expressed great regret for the victim’s family and he was very sorry for causing such trouble in Hong Kong,” Koon said, calling Chan’s decision “brave”.

Taiwan maintains the death penalty for murder, but Koon said Chan was unlikely to get that if he voluntaril­y surrendere­d.

The revelation comes as Hong Kong witnessed a 20th consecutiv­e weekend of protests.

On Friday night, thousands of protesters formed human chains outside multiple subway stations to protest against city leaders using a colonial-era emergency law to ban face masks at protests.

Many of those at the rally defied the ban by covering their face.

Yu Law, 33, had fashioned a mask in the shape of a camera and was protesting in Tsim Sha Tsui district.

“If we don’t march now, we may not have the chance in the future,” she said.

Earlier in the day police rejected an applicatio­n for a large rally today, saying they feared that hardcore protesters would hijack it, leading to violence. — AFP

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia