World

Four Hong Kong activists face years in jail for subversion

Hundreds have also been nabbed under Beijing-imposed security law

Updated 3 years ago · Published on 29 Jul 2022 8:30PM

Four Hong Kong activists face years in jail for subversion
Police detain a demonstrator during a flash mob protest in Hong Kong on November 13, 2019. China is remoulding the city in its authoritarian image, using the wide-ranging security law imposed in 2020 to silence dissent. – AFP pic, July 29, 2022

HONG KONG – Four Hong Kong activists today pleaded guilty to subversion, a violation that could see them jailed for years under the city’s Beijing-imposed national security law.

China is remoulding Hong Kong in its authoritarian image, using the wide-ranging security law to silence dissent.

The latest international criticism of the law came this week from the UN Human Rights Committee, which said it was too broad and applied arbitrarily.

Today, four people – aged between 19 and 21 – pleaded guilty to subversion, after prosecutors accused them of inciting others to overthrow the government.

They could now be imprisoned for years under the security law, which China imposed on Hong Kong in 2020 after a wave of huge and sometimes violent pro-democracy protests.

The four were accused of setting up street booths to promote “revolution” against the Chinese government and to incite separatism.

As proof of subversion, the prosecution cited one of the defendants urging the public to not use a Covid-19 contact-tracing app and to disobey anti-epidemic policies.

The activists – Wong Yat-chin, Chan Chi-sum, Chu Wai-ying and Wong Yuen-lam – now await sentencing. They will return to court on September 24.

More than 200 people have been arrested so far over alleged violations of the security law.

Chinese and Hong Kong authorities have dismissed criticism of the law, saying it is “unsubstantiated”.

Hong Kong Chief Executive John Lee today said the law had brought stability and peace back to the city, describing the criticism from the UN rights watchdog as “misguided”. – AFP, July 29, 2022

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