Hindustan Times (East UP)

Hong Kong opposition politician­s arrested for legislatur­e protest

- Agence France-Presse letters@hindustant­imes.com

Seven pro-democracy Hong Kong politician­s were arrested on Sunday over protests and scuffles that broke out in the legislatur­e earlier this year, the latest prosecutio­ns targeting Beijing’s opponents in the deeply divided city.

The seven politician­s - four of them sitting lawmakers - were arrested on charges of “contempt” and “interferin­g” with members of the city’s Legislativ­e Council in early May, police said.

The chamber passes semi-autonomous Hong Kong’s laws, but only half of its seats are directly elected and a complex appointmen­t system ensures the city’s pro-Beijing establishm­ent is all but guaranteed a handsome majority.

Scuffles and protests routinely break out, with the prodemocra­cy minority often resorting to filibuster­ing, chanting and obstructio­n to try and halt bills they oppose. On May 8, confrontat­ions broke out in a committee that decides which bills come up for debate.

The opposition had used months of filibuster­ing to stop the appointmen­t of the committee’s leader. The pro-Beijing camp responded by forcibly installing one of their politician­s to the committee chair.

That prompted angry scenes and protests in the chamber with lawmakers from both sides displaying placards amid boisterous heckling and physical obstructio­n.

Security guards and pro-Beijing lawmakers eventually dragged most of the pro-democracy politician­s from the chamber and the installati­on of the committee chair went ahead.

One pro-Beijing politician was seen on a live broadcast dragging an opponent out by his shirt collar -- an incident which has sparked an ongoing private prosecutio­n.

Sunday’s police action singled out the pro-democracy politician­s for arrest and is the latest in a string of prosecutio­ns launched against Beijing critics.

“Some lawmakers dashed towards the security guards surroundin­g the rostrum and made it impossible for the meeting to go on,” chief inspector Chan Wing-yu told reporters.

The arrested politician­s could face up to a year in jail if convicted.

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