The Citizen (Gauteng)

Tycoon charged for protesting

HONG KONG’S JIMMY LAI: POLICE HAD BANNED RALLY Two veteran pro-democracy activists also arrested.

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Hong Kong

Hong Kong media tycoon Jimmy Lai, a high-profile critic of Beijing, was arrested yesterday for taking part in last year’s pro-democracy protests that rocked the city for seven months.

The 72-year-old owner of the Apple Daily newspaper is accused of joining a rally on 31 August that had been banned by police for security reasons.

Lai was arrested and charged along with veteran pro-democracy activists Lee Cheuk Yan and Yeung Sum, police said.

The trio could be jailed for up to five years if convicted of taking part in an “unauthoris­ed assembly”. They are due to appear in court on 5 May.

Tens of thousands of protesters defied the police ban on the demonstrat­ion marking the anniversar­y of Beijing’s rejection of a call for universal suffrage for Hong Kong that sparked the 2014 “Umbrella Movement”. Some gathered in the name of a religious procession, which does not require police approval, while others claimed they were shopping.

In a separate charge, Lai is accused of intimidati­ng a reporter in 2018 during a vigil for the victims of China’s bloody Tiananmen crackdown on 4 June 1989.

Amnesty Internatio­nal said the legal action against the trio was politicall­y motivated. “These unjustifia­ble arrests are a shameless attempt to harass and silence those in Hong Kong’s pro-democracy movement,” said the rights group’s Man-kei Tam.

Hong Kong was rocked by huge and sometimes violent street protests last year, sparked by a now-abandoned proposal to allow extraditio­ns to the Chinese mainland. They soon morphed into a wider movement calling for greater freedoms in what is the most concerted challenge to Beijing’s rule since the former British colony’s 1997 handover.

The rallies and clashes have since died down, partly due to exhaustion and arrests but also because of the emergence of the deadly coronaviru­s.

China and Hong Kong leaders have refused to accede to the protesters’ demands, which include free elections in the city, an inquiry into alleged police misconduct, and amnesty for the nearly 7 000 people arrested. –

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