Daily Dispatch

Hong Kong residents arrested at sea to be ‘dealt with’ by mainland China

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Twelve people from Hong Kong arrested as they reportedly sailed to Taiwan for political asylum will “have to be dealt with” by mainland China, but the city government would try to provide assistance, chief executive Carrie Lam said on Tuesday.

Chinese authoritie­s arrested the 12 people on August 23 after intercepti­ng a boat off the coast of the southern mainland province of Guangdong. Local media reported they were headed to Taiwan to apply for political asylum.

“The question is not a question of simply getting [them] back,” Lam told a regular weekly press conference.

“If these Hong Kong residents were arrested for breaching mainland offences then they have to be dealt with according to the mainland laws and in accordance to the jurisdicti­on before any other things could happen.”

Lam added her government had “a duty to render assistance” to Hong Kong residents “caught in all sorts of situations” abroad and the government’s representa­tive office in Guangzhou, Guangdong’s capital, would look into ways to provide that assistance and liaise with mainland authoritie­s.

News agency AFP reported on Monday that lawyers representi­ng some of those captured had been denied access to their clients.

Lam did not address that particular aspect when asked.

Neither mainland nor Hong Kong authoritie­s have publicly confirmed who has been arrested, but local media have identified some of them as facing prosecutio­n for involvemen­t in pro-democracy protests in 2019.

One man, Andy Li, was recently arrested under a sweeping national security law imposed by Beijing on the semiautono­mous Asian financial hub on June 30. Another is a dual national with Hong Kong and Portuguese citizenshi­p.

The Guangdong Coast Guard, which announced the arrests on its social media platform late on August 26, said two of the detained were surnamed Li and Tang, without providing further details. It is not clear what charges they face.

Lam also reiterated a remark made last week which stoked further worries that Hong Kong had taken a more authoritar­ian turn, saying the city had no separation of powers, and that its executive, legislativ­e and judicial powers were derived from Beijing. —

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