Daily Dispatch

Hong Kong activist Wong gets bail over 2019 protests

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Hong Kong democracy activist Joshua Wong was granted bail on Wednesday after being formally charged in court in connection with participat­ing in an unauthoris­ed assembly in October 2019 and violating a thencity anti-mask law.

The court decision comes as Wong and other activists face prosecutio­n on suspicion of several offences related to last prodemocra­cy protests last year, which prompted Beijing to impose a sweeping national security law in the Asian financial hub on June 30.

Wong, 23, who was arrested on September 24, was defiant.

“We just want to send a clear message to the world, even if they arrest us, prosecute us and even lock us up in prison, there’s no reason for us to give up,” he said outside the court.

His case was adjourned until December 18.

Just 17 years old when he became the face of the studentled Umbrella Movement democracy protests in 2014, Wong was not a leading figure of the often violent unrest that shook the semi-autonomous former British colony last year.

He had been a frequent visitor to Washington where he appealed to the US Congress to support Hong Kong’s democracy movement and counter Beijing’s tightening grip.

His US visits angered Beijing, which says he is a “black hand” of foreign forces.

The new security law punishes anything China considers to be subversion, secession, terrorism and collusion with foreign forces, with up to life in prison.

Authoritie­s introduced a law against masks last year in a bid to help police identify protesters they suspected of committing crimes.

The Hong Kong government has since then made masks mandatory in most circumstan­ces because of the novel coronaviru­s. —

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