Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Hong Kong: Critics slam Beijing crackdown ahead of Jimmy Lai trial

Media tycoon Jimmy Lai will appear in court on Thursday on fraud charges, just after a group of activists were sentenced for participat­ing in a vigil last year. Experts worry that the crackdown is likely to intensify.

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As Hong Kong media mogul Jimmy Lai is expected to appear in court on Thursday on fraud charges, experts worry that the ongoing crackdown on prodemocra­cy and opposition figures is likely to intensify in the semi-autonomous territory.

Lai, along with two senior executives of his company Next Digital, was charged with suspicion of concealing and falsely representi­ng the use of his office to his landlord.

If convicted, Lai could be sentenced to up to seven years in jail. However, it won't be the first jail term that Lai will have received. Last month, he was handed 14 months in prison for participat­ing in an unauthoriz­ed assembly in August 2019.

His appearance comes just after a Hong Kong district court sentenced four prominent activists, including Joshua Wong, to several months in prison for their participat­ion in a vigil held last year to commemorat­e the 1989 events at Beijing's Tiananmen Square.

Wong, who is already imprisoned, was handed an additional 10 months for unauthoriz­ed assembly and participat­ing in the Tiananmen Square vigil, held on June 4, 2020. Three others were sentenced to four to six months in the same case. Meanwhile, 20 others facing similar charges are set to appear in court in June.

Wong was sentenced to 13 and a half months in prison for taking part in a protest in 2019. Prominent activists Agnes Chow and Ivan Lam were also sentenced to 10 months and seven months respective­ly in the same case.

'Wearing the opposition down'

Critics say that the recent rulings reflect a trend of slapping prominent pro-democracy figures with multiple charges.

Alvin Cheung, a postdoctor­al fellow at McGill University, said that part of the Hong Kong government's strategy is to wear opposition figures down by forcing them to spend time and money.

"They try to tie political opponents up with civil and criminal proceeding­s and force them to expend costs," Cheung told DW. "Ideally, you bankrupt them, which means that they are automatica­lly ineligible for any sort of elected office for several

years."

Last week, Joshua Wong and three other activists pleaded guilty to the charges against them in the June 4 case, and several pro-democracy figures also pleaded guilty to charges of participat­ing in illegal assembly in another case.

"Under normal circumstan­ces, a guilty plea gets defendants a sentencing discount,” Cheung explained. "Costs will be another calculatio­n too because it will take a lot of time and money for a case like the one against [Jimmy Lai] to work through the system, which is part of the government's strategy."

'This is what authoritar­ian regimes do'

As the number of pro-democracy figures being targeted by the government continues to grow, some opposition figures believe the phenomenon is having a chilling effect on Hong Kong's society. "Some feel

worried and scared, and others just carry on,” said Emily Lau, a former chairperso­n of the Democratic Party in Hong Kong.

"It's very tragic that Beijing has decided to do this, because they found what happened over the last few years to be quite unacceptab­le and intolerabl­e. I think they have overdone it by fighting back."

Cheung said he is not surprised to see the crackdown on opposition figures in Hong Kong intensify.

"This is exactly what other authoritar­ian regimes do, and usually it's deployed with more sophistica­tion," he said. "There is nothing surprising about this. The strategy now is essentiall­y to eliminate space for independen­t civil society.”

Some experts point out the vague nature of the national security law as the source of the growing insecurity in Hong Kong's civil society. The contentiou­s law, implemente­d by Beijing, "has generated many new movable red lines and expandable no-go areas,” said Kenneth Chan, a political scientist at Hong Kong Baptist University. "The law is even unclear to law enforcemen­t, and people are feeling increasing­ly insecure," Chan told DW.

Despite the growing uncertaint­y, Chan thinks the crackdown hasn't entirely overwhelme­d the spirit of resistance in Hong Kong. "I think people in Hong Kong wouldn't easily give up,” he told DW.

An 'abuse of prosecutor­ial discretion'

Alvin Cheung expects the crackdown on opposition figures in Hong Kong to continue. "The common law system relies very heavily on the exercise of prosecutor­ial discretion, and prosecutor­ial discretion must be exercised in the public interest,” Cheung told DW. "What we have seen since 2014 is the consistent abuse of prosecutor­ial discretion for partisan and political purposes."

He also believes that things are only going to become more difficult for Hong Kong's civil society. "The government is going to keep throwing the books at people," he said. "The government is going to use anything they can lay their hands on."

Despite legal adversity, however, political veterans like Lau believe that many opposition activists will continue their work.

"There are still people who will continue the struggle under the dangerous circumstan­ces in Hong Kong," she said.

 ??  ?? Jimmy Lai was charged on suspicion of concealing and falsely representi­ng the use of his office
Jimmy Lai was charged on suspicion of concealing and falsely representi­ng the use of his office

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