China arrests 8 more in crackdown on Hong Kong democracy advocates

FAN Editor

Hong Kong — Hong Kong police on Tuesday arrested eight pro-democracy activists over their role in an unauthorized protest last summer, widening a crackdown on dissent in the semi-autonomous Chinese city. The arrests, which included several former lawmakers, are tied to a July 1 demonstration in which thousands defied a protest ban and rallied on the streets against a national security law imposed on the city by China‘s central government in Beijing the day before.
 
Former pro-democracy lawmakers Wu Chi-wai, Eddie Chu and Leung Kwok Hung were arrested at their homes on charges related to organizing and participating in the protest, according to Facebook posts on their respective pages.

Accompanied by fellow lawmakers Fernando Cheung Chiu-hung (first left), Raymond Chan Chi-chuen (second left) and activist Ken Tsang Kin-chiu (1st right), lawmaker Leung Kwok Hung (L3) (aka Long Hair) appears at Wan Chai District Court in Wan Chai. Leung
Accompanied by fellow lawmakers Fernando Cheung Chiu-hung (first left), Raymond Chan Chi-chuen (second left) and activist Ken Tsang Kin-chiu (1st right), lawmaker Leung Kwok Hung (center) appears at the Wan Chai District Court in Wan Chai, Hong Kong. David Wong/South China Morning Post/Getty

Hong Kong police said in a statement that eight men aged between 24 and 64 had been arrested for inciting, organizing and taking part in an unauthorized assembly. The arrests came less than a week after police sentenced three of Hong Kong’s most prominent young pro-democracy activists to prison terms. 

CBS News correspondent Ramy Inocencio reported that the jailing of Joshua Wong, Agnes Chow and Ivan Lam last week was just another nail in the coffin of Hong Kong’s once-very-public opposition movement. 

Pro-democracy activists Ivan Lam and Joshua Wong arrive at Lai Chi Kok Reception Centre by prison van after pleading guilty to charges of organising and inciting an unauthorised assembly near the police headquarters during last year's anti-government prot
Pro-democracy activists Ivan Lam and Joshua Wong (center) arrive at Lai Chi Kok Reception Center after pleading guilty to charges of organizing and inciting an unauthorized assembly near the police headquarters during last year’s anti-government protests, in Hong Kong, China, November 23, 2020. TYRONE SIU/REUTERS

Millions of protesters took to the streets from June to December last year, decrying the erosion of the Asian financial hub’s semi-autonomy from Beijing.

Traditionally, a protest march is held every year on July 1 — the day Hong Kong was handed from British to Chinese control in 1997 — but this year’s protest was banned with authorities citing the health risks from the pandemic.
 
Hong Kong and Beijing have increasingly clamped down on dissent in the city since the introduction of a new national security law, which was aimed at curbing the political unrest and protests against the government. The new law has been roundly condemned by the U.S. and many other Western nations as a blatant infringement on Hong Kongers’ rights.
 
The crackdown it brought has led to accusations that Beijing is violating the autonomy it promised Hong Kong following the 1997 handover. It also has triggered warnings the ruling Communist Party is damaging Hong Kong’s appeal as a global business center and one of Asia’s most dynamic cities.

Hong Kong lawmakers resign en masse 01:44

More than 370 people were arrested on July 1, with at least 10 arrested under the national security law.
 
In August, the U.S. imposed sanctions on 11 officials from mainland China and Hong Kong, including Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam, for undermining the city’s autonomy. The U.S. sanctioned another 14 Chinese officials on Tuesday for undermining the city’s democratic processes.

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