Children's tales of sheep and wolves incite sedition, HK police say
		
		 
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		 [July 22, 2021] 
		By Donny Kwok and Sara Cheng 
		 
		HONG KONG (Reuters) -Hong Kong police 
		arrested five people on Thursday on sedition charges, saying that 
		children's books they had published featuring wolves and sheep as 
		characters were aimed at inciting hatred towards the city's government 
		amongst youngsters. 
		 
		The arrests were the latest involving suspected critics of Hong Kong's 
		government that have raised fears about the shrinking space for dissent 
		since Beijing imposed a national security law in June 2020 to put an end 
		to pro-democracy protests in the semi-autonomous city. 
		 
		Police said one book, "Defenders of the Sheep Village", was connected to 
		the protests. In the story, wolves want to occupy the village and eat 
		the sheep, who in turn use their horns to fight back.  
		 
		Those arrested were members of a speech therapists' union who produced 
		books for children. Police said the five were two men and three women 
		aged between 25 and 28. They did not identify them by name. 
		
		  
		
		The five were arrested on suspicion of conspiring to publish seditious 
		material under a colonial-era law which had been rarely used before the 
		anti-government protests began in the former British colony. 
		 
		Senior police superintendent Steve Li told a media briefing that police 
		were concerned by the books because of the information inside for 
		children which "turns their mind and develop a moral standard to be 
		against society". 
		 
		They highlighted two other books produced by the union in addition to 
		"Defenders of the Sheep Village". 
		
            The second told the story of 12 sheep taken by wolves 
		to the beasts' village where they would be cooked, potentially alluding 
		to the 12 Hong Kong people captured by China in August last year at sea 
		as they tried to flee the city by boat. Li said the story was not 
		factual and incited hatred against authorities. 
		 
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			A police officer escorts one of five suspects, detained on suspicion 
			of publishing and distributing seditious material, in Hong Kong, 
			China July 22, 2021. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu 
            
			
			  
            The third book tells the story of wolves sneaking through a hole 
			into the sheep village and shows the wolves as dirty and the sheep 
			as clean. This aimed to create hatred against the government, Li 
			said. 
			 
			First convictions under the sedition law can carry a maximum penalty 
			of two years in prison, police said. The General Union of Hong Kong 
			Speech Therapists could not be reached for comment. 
			 
			Authorities have denied any erosion of rights and freedoms in Hong 
			Kong - which returned to China in 1997 under a "one country, two 
			systems" formula aimed at preserving its freedoms and role as a 
			financial hub - but say China's national security is a red line. 
			 
			Security officials have said law enforcement action is based on 
			evidence and has nothing to do with an individual's political 
			stance, background or profession. 
			 
			(Reporting by Donny Kwok, Sara Cheng and Marius Zaharia; Writing by 
			Farah Master; Editing by Angus MacSwan) 
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