Bangkok Post

Cops arrest democracy activists

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HONG KONG: Nine democracy protesters were arrested in Hong Kong yesterday over an anti-Beijing rally in the latest swoop by police as activists say they are being persecuted.

Concerns are growing that the semiautono­mous city’s freedoms are under threat from Beijing, fuelling calls from some groups for greater autonomy or even a complete split from China.

Pro-independen­ce activists Yau Waiching and Baggio Leung were arrested and charged on Wednesday over causing chaos in the legislatur­e after being barred from taking up their seats as lawmakers last year.

And last month nine pro-democracy activists — including student protesters and lawmakers — were charged for their roles in mass 2014 pro-democracy Umbrella Movement rallies.

The spate of arrests come ahead of an expected visit by China’s President Xi Jinping to mark the 20th anniversar­y of the handover of the city by Britain back to China in 1997 on July 1.

“I believe the police have set out to arrest all street activists so they won’t dare to protest when Xi Jinping visits,” pro-democracy leader Joshua Wong said.

Nine protesters were arrested yesterday over their participat­ion in a rally in November against China’s decision to intervene in the row over whether to disqualify Mr Yau and Mr Baggio.

That protest outside China’s liaison office in Hong Kong saw scuffles as demonstrat­ors charged barriers and police used pepper spray to drive them back.

The rally was triggered after Beijing announced it would make a special interpreta­tion of Hong Kong’s constituti­on to determine whether Mr Yau and Mr Baggio should be prevented from taking up their seats after staging an anti-China protest during their oath-taking.

Beijing’s final ruling, two days after the rally, effectivel­y ensured the pair were barred.

Two of those arrested yesterday belong to new pro-democracy party Demosisto, founded by student leaders Mr Wong and Nathan Law, who is now a legislator. Others include members of the long-standing pro-democracy party League of Social Democrats (LSD), as well as student or former student protesters.

The charges include illegal assembly, obstructin­g a police officer and assaulting a police officer, activists said.

All nine protesters emerged from Western police station yesterday and said they had been charged and released on bail.

LSD chairman Avery Ng, who was charged with inciting others to cause disorder in public, said he would not back down.

“We will continue to voice our discontent and our anger towards the Communist Party and the Hong Kong government, especially when they are stripping away our basic democratic rights,” he told reporters.

Rights group Amnesty Internatio­nal criticised the arrests. “The repeated use of vague charges against prominent figures in Hong Kong’s pro-democracy movement reeks of an orchestrat­ed and retaliator­y campaign by the authoritie­s to punish those that advocate for democracy in Hong Kong,” said Mabel Au, Director of Amnesty Internatio­nal Hong Kong.

Human Rights Watch warned authoritie­s’ “heavy-handed” approach could backfire, pointing to 2014’s mass protests, prompted by restrictio­ns imposed by Beijing on fully free leadership elections.

“It is ironic that, as the 20th anniversar­y of Hong Kong’s handover to China approaches, the territory’s autonomy looks increasing­ly fragile,” said the group’s Hong Kong-based researcher, Maya Wang.

 ??  ?? Ng: ‘I won’t back down’
Ng: ‘I won’t back down’

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