Kuwait Times

Agnes Chow: From teen activist to jailed HK leader

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Agnes Chow hails from a generation of Hong Kong democracy activists who cut their teeth in politics as teenagers and are now being steadily silenced by China. The 24year-old, one of the democracy movement’s most recognizab­le faces, served just under seven months behind bars for her role in an “unlawful assembly” outside the city’s police headquarte­rs during 2019’s huge and often violent democracy protests.

She was jailed alongside two other wellknown youth activists, Joshua Wong and Ivan Lam. She entered the fraught world of Hong Kong’s politics early. Chow has described growing up in an apolitical Catholic household.

But at the age of 15, she joined the youthled movement protesting against plans to implement “moral and national education” in public schools. Students feared the plan would herald the kind of heavily censored education seen on China’s mainland.

They staged huge sit-ins and the plan was eventually shelved in a rare example of protest forcing a Hong Kong government climbdown. It was during those demonstrat­ions she met fellow teen activist Wong. Two years later, Wong, Chow and other students were key figures in the “Umbrella Movement” — 79 days of sit-ins and rallies sparked by Beijing’s refusal to make good on its promise to one day grant Hong Kongers universal suffrage.

The protests were peaceful, but not successful. Yet, a whole new generation of opposition politician­s was forged in those rallies. They would go on to become a major thorn in the side of Beijing as it tried to tighten its grip on the semi-autonomous financial hub, which was increasing­ly chafing under Chinese Communist Party rule.

Chow helped found the now disbanded prodemocra­cy party Demosisto alongside Wong, Nathan Law and other young political leaders. She gave up a British passport to stand for Hong Kong’s partially elected legislatur­e, only to be barred from standing because her party advocated “self-determinat­ion”.

Since then it has become common for authoritie­s to disqualify politician­s for the views they hold. —AFP

 ?? AFP ?? HONG KONG: Police clear a path through the media pack for a vehicle carrying pro-democracy activist Agnes Chow after she was released from prison in Hong Kong yesterday after spending seven months behind bars for her role in a protest outside the police headquarte­rs in 2019. —
AFP HONG KONG: Police clear a path through the media pack for a vehicle carrying pro-democracy activist Agnes Chow after she was released from prison in Hong Kong yesterday after spending seven months behind bars for her role in a protest outside the police headquarte­rs in 2019. —

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