Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Hong Kong: Pro-democracy activists kept in custody

A Hong Kong court has ordered 47 pro-democracy activists to be held behind bars as they await trial in late May. Though 15 were initially granted bail in a marathon arraignmen­t hearing, that decision is now under review.

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A Hong Kong court on Thursday ordered 47 dissidents held on subversion charges under a Beijing-imposed national security law not be released on bail before a May 31 court hearing.

Fifteen of the people charged were initially granted bail but have now been ordered to return to custody to await the decision of a 48-hour review prompted by a Department of Justice appeal. Thirty-one activists were denied bail outright.

The defendants, 47 in all, were among 55 pro-democracy activists arrested in January under Hong Kong's new national security law.

The law, which was foisted upon semiautono­mous Hong Kong by Beijing, criminaliz­es secession, subversion and collusion with foreign forces to interfere with local affairs. The most serious charges carry a penalty of life in prison. Eight of the people arrested in January were not charged.

Most Hong Kong prodemocra­cy activists jailed or in exile

The dissidents were detained Sunday in the biggest singleday roundup of opposition activists since the security law was enacted in June. They stand accused of subversion for their roles in planning an unofficial July 2020 primary vote for Hong Kong government elections.

The government alleges that the activists sought to use the poll to field pro-democracy candidates with the best chances of being elected to Hong Kong's government in a September vote — which was eventually postponed — with the intention of blocking legislatio­n, paralyzing the Legislativ­e Council and forcing the resignatio­n of Chief Executive Carrie Lam.

Sunday's arrests were significan­t in that most all of Hong Kong's prominent pro-democracy activists are now behind bars or in self-exile. Beijing has continued to crack down on dissent — ignoring internatio­nal outcry and the desires of Hong Kong residents who were promised "one country, two systems" when the semi-autonomous city was returned to China by the United Kingdom in 1997. Watch video 04:57 Share Nathan Law speaks with DW Send Facebook Twitterred di tE Mail Facebook Messenger WebWhatsap­p Web Telegram linked in Permalink https://p.dw.com/p/3lifu Nathan Law: Arrests mean end of 'one country, two systems' 'Acts endangerin­g national security'

In a statement, Chief Magistrate Victor So said of the activists initially granted bail that "these 15 defendants, the court finds it has sufficient ground to believe that you won't commit acts endangerin­g national security again during the period of bail."

Speaking of the 32 denied bail, So said: "The court does not find it has sufficient ground to believe that you will not continue to commit acts that endanger national security."

Among the defendants denied bail were Benny Tai, cofounder of the 2014 Occupy Central movement, who removed his bail applicatio­n after he was detained in a separate case, and Joshua Wong, who is currently serving a 13.5-month sentence on protest charges.

UK Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab called the charges leveled against pro-democracy activists "deeply disturbing," decrying Beijing's national security law as a tool to crush political dissent.

Hundreds of pro-democracy supporters descended upon the West Kowloon Magistrate­s' Court to show solidarity with the people arrested, singing and shouting protest songs and slogans outlawed by Beijing for their secessioni­st content. Soon thereafter, police hoisted a warning flag to alert the people present that they may be violating the national security law.

Defendants charged with nonviolent crimes are usually granted bail under Hong Kong's common law system, but infraction­s against Beijing's national security law fall under a different set of rules.

The new law removes the automatic path to bail, allowing it to be granted only in cases in which it is believed that defendants "will not continue to commit acts endangerin­g national security."

Hong Kong testing limits of national security law

Lev Nachman, a visiting scholar at National Taiwan University in Taipei whose research focuses on social movements and politics in Hong Kong, told DW: "The marathon-style hearing for the 47 pro-democracy figures just seems like the government is trying to escalate what the national security law can do."

He said the Justice Department's appeal against the decision to grant bail to 15 of the 47 defendants "sets the tone for how aggressive the Hong Kong government is going to be about stamping out any sort of opposition voice that they can."

 ??  ?? Observers say Hong Kong's government is pushing the limits of the new national security law to crush all political dissent
Observers say Hong Kong's government is pushing the limits of the new national security law to crush all political dissent

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