BusinessMirror

21-year-old sentenced to 5 years for thwarted bomb plot that aimed to build HK resistance

- By Kanis Leung

HONG KONG—A Hong Kong man was sentenced to more than five years in prison for participat­ing in a thwarted bomb plot that aimed to build resistance forces, in a closely watched case involving high school students accused of serious crimes following the 2019 antigovern­ment protests.

Prosecutor­s said Alexander Au, 21, and the five others in court Thursday had planned to manufactur­e explosives and target court buildings. Their plot was foiled due to a police investigat­ion, and no bombs were made and no casualties occurred.

Though the six are not among the most prominent activists in Hong Kong’s suppressed democracy movement, their case has drawn attention because they were all students when the prosecutio­n began in 2021 and they were charged with conspiracy to carry out terrorist activities under the National Security Law.

Earlier this month, Au and four defendants, aged between 17 and 20, pleaded guilty to conspiring to cause explosions that are likely to endanger life and property, an alternativ­e to the terrorism charge that falls under a separate law. The remaining defendant Ho Yu-wang, 19, admitted to the terrorism charge.

Ho was described as one of the plot mastermind­s. Judge Alex Lee said at Thursday’s sentencing that the plot would have worsened the social situation in Hong Kong had it materializ­ed and could have caused casualties.

Lee sentenced Au to five years and eight months, saying Au was more culpable since he was involved in renting a room in a guesthouse for making explosives and inspecting targeted buildings with Ho.

Three defendants, who were younger than 21 and had relatively minor roles, would be sent to rehabilita­tion-focused training centers, Lee said. They could be held for up to three years, but the true length of their stays will depend on authoritie­s’ evaluation of their conduct.

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