South China Morning Post

Activist handed 2 more weeks in jail for obstructin­g officer

Ex-lawmaker currently behind bars also fined for releasing a balloon in restricted airspace

- Brian Wong brian.wong@scmp.com

Jailed former lawmaker Lee Cheuk-yan has received two more weeks behind bars for obstructin­g a police officer during a peaceful protest that called for the release of political prisoners outside the Legislativ­e Council last year.

Eastern Court yesterday also imposed a HK$3,500 fine on the 65-year-old opposition activist for releasing a balloon in restricted airspace in breach of aviation legislatio­n during the incident on New Year’s Day of 2021.

A former unionist and leader of the group behind the annual June 4 candleligh­t vigil, Lee is currently serving a 20-month jail sentence for his roles in four unauthoris­ed assemblies, three of which stemmed from the anti-government protests in 2019.

His lawyer said he was set to complete that sentence in September, though he would remain behind bars afterwards while awaiting trial under the national security law for allegedly inciting subversion in his role as chairman of the now-defunct Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements of China.

After yesterday’s court session,

Lee waved to a dozen supporters in the public gallery and told them to “hang in there” before leaving alongside prison officers.

Prosecutor­s have charged Lee and fellow activist Tsang Kin-shing, 66, with staging the small gathering on Legislativ­e Council Road organised by the Civil Human Rights Front on January 1.

The now-disbanded organisati­on decided earlier against holding its annual New Year’s Day march, as police had repeatedly turned down its applicatio­ns for events citing coronaviru­s concerns and the risk of peaceful demonstrat­ions being hijacked by radical protesters.

Earlier that day, participan­ts rode through the streets atop a white van with a banner saying “free all political prisoners”.

Lee and Tsang then carried a

Lee Cheuk-yan is currently serving a sentence of this many months in jail for his roles in four unauthoris­ed assemblies white balloon attached to a rolled-up paper banner emblazoned with the words “release political prisoners” outside the legislatur­e.

Flying the balloon with the banner – which had a total length of more than two metres – is prohibited in the airspace above the Legco building without the chief executive’s consent.

Prosecutor­s said Lee had stood before Senior Inspector Chung Ting-sum and prevented him from stopping Tsang, who let go of the balloon.

Tsang was fined HK$2,500 after pleading guilty last August to the aviation offence under the Air Navigation (Hong Kong) Order 1995, but Lee denied the charge and another count accusing him of obstructin­g Chung from performing his duties.

Magistrate Jacky Ip Kai-leung found Lee guilty on both charges, saying he had clearly acted in concert with Tsang to fly the balloon, despite repeated police warnings.

Magistrate Ip also found no reasonable excuse for Lee to stand in the senior inspector’s way, adding the defendant’s act, be it intentiona­l or reckless, had prevented police from seizing the evidence.

The magistrate sentenced Lee to a fine for flying the balloon and three weeks’ jail for causing the obstructio­n, but ordered two weeks to be served separately to his current sentence.

 ?? Photo: Handout ?? Lee Cheuk-yan is the former leader of the group behind the annual June 4 candleligh­t vigil.
Photo: Handout Lee Cheuk-yan is the former leader of the group behind the annual June 4 candleligh­t vigil.

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