The Guardian Australia

Hong Kong: 47 democracy activists charged with subversion under security law

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Forty-seven Hong Kong democrats and activists have been charged with conspiracy to commit subversion, in the largest single crackdown on the democratic opposition under a China-imposed national security law.

Sam Cheung, a young activist and a participan­t in an unofficial primary election last summer, was charged after reporting to a local police station on Sunday, dressed in a black mask and accompanie­d by his wife.

“Hong Kongers have a really tough time these days,” he told reporters before entering the station. “I hope everyone won’t give up on Hong Kong ... (and) fight on.”

Cheung was arrested in a dawn raid along with more than 50 other democrats on 6 January in the largest national security operation since the law’s passage last June.

They were accused of organising and participat­ing in an unofficial “primary election” last July aimed at selecting the strongest candidates for a legislativ­e council election.

The Hong Kong police said in a statement on Sunday they had laid a charge against 47 persons with the single count of subversion. They will appear in court Monday morning, the statement added.

The democrats were detained at the time, questioned, and some had their mobile phones and computers confiscate­d, then released pending further investigat­ions.

“My chance of bail won’t be too great,” wrote Benny Tai in an earlier social media post. He was also charged and accused by Chinese authoritie­s of being a key tactician for the pro-democracy movement in the former British colony.

Those also called in by Hong Kong police include a group of younger “resistance camp” democratic activists including Lester Shum, Sam Cheung, Ventus Lau and Fergus Leung.

The democrats denounced the arrests as political persecutio­n for the informal, peaceful poll that drew 600,000 votes in a city of 7.5 million.

A rights advocacy group, “Power for Democracy”, that co-organised the primary elections, said in a Facebook post it had disbanded.

The Hong Kong police say 99 individual­s have been arrested for suspected violations of the security laws so far.

Some of these have been denied bail, including media mogul and prominent China critic Jimmy Lai, despite protracted legal appeals.

The sweeping national security laws introduced last June – essentiall­y by decree from Beijing, but with the blessing of the Hong Kong government – are seen by critics as a threat to Hong Kong’s freedoms and autonomy. The laws punish acts of subversion, secession, collusion with foreign forces and terrorism with possible life imprisonme­nt.

 ?? Photograph: Jérôme Favre/EPA ?? Benny Tai, a Hong Kong legal scholar, speaks to the press before being charged with subversion on Sunday.
Photograph: Jérôme Favre/EPA Benny Tai, a Hong Kong legal scholar, speaks to the press before being charged with subversion on Sunday.

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