Miami Herald

Activists are sentenced to prison for Hong Kong protest

- HONG KONG

Joshua Wong, a prominent pro-democracy activist in Hong Kong, was sentenced Wednesday to more than a year in prison for his role in a protest last year, the latest blow to the city’s embattled political opposition.

To critics of the government, Wong’s prison sentence is an attempt to muzzle one of the most globally recognized figures of the city’s resistance to Beijing’s encroachme­nt. Wong, 24, rose to prominence nearly a decade ago as a skinny, bespectacl­ed teenager who rallied students to oppose what he saw as the Chinese Communist Party’s indoctrina­tion in schools. His activism has made him a key target in Beijing’s drive to quash dissent in the territory.

Wong was sentenced to

13 1⁄ months in prison, while

2

Agnes Chow, a fellow activist, received 10 months. Ivan Lam, a third member of their disbanded group, Demosisto, was sentenced to seven months. They had faced up to three years in prison.

Their sentencing points to the wide-ranging nature of Beijing’s increasing­ly aggressive crackdown on political opposition in Hong Kong, which was roiled by months of anti-government demonstrat­ions last year.

The police have arrested activists, journalist­s and politician­s, while pro-Beijing voices have sought to pressure the city’s largely independen­t judiciary and freewheeli­ng news media. China also moved to force the ouster of four lawmakers last month, prompting the mass resignatio­n of the pro-democracy camp from the local legislatur­e.

This summer, China imposed a national-security law that grants authoritie­s sweeping powers to limit dissent in Hong Kong. More than two dozen people have been arrested under it, including Chow and Jimmy Lai, the founder of the city’s biggest pro-democracy newspaper. Lai and two senior managers in his media group were charged Wednesday with fraud, his newspaper, Apple Daily, reported.

Demosisto disbanded shortly after lawmakers in Beijing approved the security law in late June. The three former members of the group had pleaded guilty to unauthoriz­ed assembly charges over a June 2019 demonstrat­ion, when thousands of people gathered in the early days of the mass protest movement that engulfed the city. The gathering was a display of both the public’s mounting anger at the police and also the ineffectiv­eness of authoritie­s’ attempts to quell the protests with tear gas and pepper spray.

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