The Freeman

HK activists appeal jail terms

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HONG KONG — Hong Kong's leading democracy activists were in court yesterday to appeal against their jail terms in a case seen as a litmus test for the independen­ce of the city's judiciary, which some fear is under pressure from Beijing.

Joshua Wong, Nathan Law and Alex Chow were jailed in August last year for their role in the 2014 Umbrella Movement mass pro-democracy protests, after Hong Kong's government pushed for harsher sentences.

A lower court had originally given Wong and Law community service orders and Chow a suspended sentence. But after the government's interventi­on they were jailed for between six and eight months by the Court of Appeal.

All three activists were later released on bail pending their appeal.

The government's move was seen as further evidence of Beijing's growing influence over the semi-autonomous city, with Chinese authoritie­s particular­ly riled by the emergence of activists calling for independen­ce for Hong Kong.

Wong and Law's political party Demosisto wants selfdeterm­ination for the city.

"Now is the chance for us to be aware how the courts of Hong Kong will recognize, will position, the motivation of civil disobedien­ce," Wong, 21, told reporters ahead of the hearing at the city's court of final appeal.

Wong said even if he was sent back to prison, he believed Hong Kong people would still keep fighting for democracy.

The unlawful assembly charges for which the three were jailed related to their involvemen­t in the storming of a fenced-off government forecourt known as Civic Square in September 2014.

Their arrests sparked wider rallies which exploded two days later when police fired tear gas at the crowds, triggering the Umbrella Movement rallies which brought parts of the city to a standstill.

Defense lawyer Robert Pang warned that harsher sentences had a "chilling effect" on young people expressing their views.

"We must guard against discouragi­ng young, idealistic persons who are doing this not for their personal benefit...from expressing their point of view," Pang told the court.

But Chief Justice Geoffrey Ma warned that protesters should not "overstep the mark", whatever their motivation.

The Umbrella Movement called for fully free leadership elections to replace a system where the city's chief executive is selected by a pro-Beijing committee, but failed to win any concession­s.

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 ?? AGENCE FRANCE PRESSE ?? Bailed Hong Kong democracy activists (from left) Joshua Wong, Nathan Law and Alex Chow face the media outside the Court of Final Appeal before their first appeal hearing against jail sentences in Hong Kong.
AGENCE FRANCE PRESSE Bailed Hong Kong democracy activists (from left) Joshua Wong, Nathan Law and Alex Chow face the media outside the Court of Final Appeal before their first appeal hearing against jail sentences in Hong Kong.

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