The Borneo Post

HK democracy leaders plead not guilty in trial

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HONG KONG: Three leading Hong Kong democracy campaigner­s pleaded not guilty yesterday to public nuisance charges over their involvemen­t in massive rallies calling for political reform, as room for opposition in the semiautono­mous city shrinks under an assertive China.

The pioneering trio are among nine activists all facing ‘ public nuisance’ charges for their participat­ion in the 2014 Umbrella Movement protests.

The charges are based on colonial- era law and carry jail terms of up to seven years.

Sociology professor Chan Kinman, 59, law professor Benny Tai, 54, and baptist minister Chu Yiu-ming, 74, founded the ‘Occupy Central’ movement in 2013 and joined with the studentled Umbrella Movement which brought parts of the city to a standstill for months, calling for free elections for the city’s leader.

The activists were welcomed outside court by hundreds of supporters shouting: “Peaceful resistance! I wanted real universal suffrage!”

Prosecutor Andrew Bruce argued that the mass protests had caused a ‘common injury done to the public’, who had been affected by the blockage of major roads.

So long as we are not crushed by imprisonme­nt and trial and do not become overly frustrated and angry, then we will become stronger and we can inspire many more people.

He accused the trio of taking part in and supporting the demonstrat­ion ‘by way of unlawful obstructio­n of public places and roads’.

Occupy Central called for the occupation of Hong Kong’s business district if the public was not given a fair vote for the city’s leader, who is appointed by a proBeijing committee.

It was overtaken by the student movement that exploded in September 2014 when police fired tear gas on gathering crowds.

The Occupy trio urged people to join what became known as the Umbrella Movement as protesters used umbrellas to shield themselves from tear gas and pepper spray.

The movement failed to win reform and since then activists have been prosecuted, with some jailed.

Professor Chan gave a farewell talk Wednesday night to a full house of more than 600 people at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, where he has been teaching for over two decades.

“So long as we are not crushed by imprisonme­nt and trial and do not become overly frustrated and angry, then we will become stronger and we can inspire many more people,” he told the audience, announcing his early retirement from next year.

“Only in the darkest hours, we can see the stars.”

He told AFP that he had prepared for the physical and mental challenges of possible jail time by taking up marathon running.

Chu, who has been unwell but attended Chan’s talk, said the trio had ‘prepared to walk on this path’.

“We were always willing to be sacrificed in order to wake up the people,” Chu told AFP.

Hong Kong has been governed under a ‘one country, two systems’ arrangemen­t since it was handed back to China by Britain in 1997.

It allows far greater civil liberties than on the Chinese mainland, but there are growing fears those freedoms are being eroded.

Ahead of the trial, rights groups had urged authoritie­s to drop what Amnesty Internatio­nal called the ‘chilling prosecutio­n’ of the nine activists, a group that includes lawmakers, student leaders and pro- democracy party campaigner­s.

Man-kei Tam, director of Amnesty Internatio­nal Hong Kong, warned there would be a ‘real danger’ of more prosecutio­ns for peaceful activism if the case was successful.

Human Rights Watch said the prosecutio­ns raised further questions about how far authoritie­s are trying to ‘politicise the courts’.

The trial at the West Kowloon Magistrate­s’ Court is expected to last 20 days. — AFP

Professor Chan Kin-man, Chinese University of Hong Kong sociology

 ??  ?? Chu (second left), Benny (centre), Chan (second right) and other pro-democracy campaigner­s chant before entering the West Kowloon Magistrate­s Court in Hong Kong. — AFP photo
Chu (second left), Benny (centre), Chan (second right) and other pro-democracy campaigner­s chant before entering the West Kowloon Magistrate­s Court in Hong Kong. — AFP photo

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