Hong Kong activist Joshua Wong jailed for further 10 months over June 4
assembly
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[May 06, 2021]
By Jessie Pang
HONG KONG (Reuters) -Hong Kong democracy
activist Joshua Wong will face an additional 10 months in jail for
participating in an unauthorised assembly on June 4 last year to
commemorate the 1989 crackdown on protesters in and around Beijing's
Tiananmen Square.
It was the first time the vigil was banned in the global financial hub,
with police citing coronavirus restrictions on group gatherings, as they
did for all demonstrations last year. This year's protest is expected to
face a similar fate.
Still, tens of thousands of people lit candles across the city in what
was largely a peaceful event last June, bar a brief skirmish with riot
police in one neighbourhood.
Commemorations of the Tiananmen crackdown are banned in mainland China,
but Hong Kong traditionally held the largest vigils globally every year,
having been promised certain freedoms when it returned to Chinese rule
in 1997, including rights of expression and assembly.
Wong, 24, already in prison on other illegal assembly convictions and
among 47 activists charged under the city's sweeping national security
law, was sentenced in the district court on Thursday.
A 15-month sentence was cut to 10 after he pleaded guilty.
Judge Stanley Chan also sentenced Lester Shum, Jannelle Leung and
Tiffany Yuen to terms of between four and six months. Twenty others
facing similar Tiananmen anniversary charges are to appear in court on
June 11.
"Freedom of assembly is not unlimited," Chan said.
Wong's longtime activist colleague, Nathan Law, who has fled the city
and lives in Britain, condemned the sentence, saying the decision to ban
the vigil last year was "unjustifiable".
"The court keeps increasing the length of imprisonment for protesters
and sees it as a pathway for a society with fewer conflicts," Law said
in a statement.
"It’s wrong — the only way to achieve harmony is to hold the powerful
accountable. Now the courts are turned into weapons against the
powerless."
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Vice-chairwoman of Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic
Democratic Movements of China, Chow Hang-tung speaks to media after
activist Joshua Wong was jailed for participating on June 4 assembly
to commemorate the 1989 crackdown on protesters in and around
Beijing's Tiananmen Square, outside the court in Hong Kong, China
May 6, 2021. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu
CLASH OF ANNIVERSARIES
The anniversary struck an especially sensitive nerve in the former
British colony last year, just as Beijing prepared to introduce the
new security law, which prescribes terms of up to life in prison for
anything China sees as subversion, secession, terrorism or collusion
with foreign forces.
This year, the anniversary event is particularly awkward for
Beijing, which is celebrating the 100th anniversary of the Communist
Party.
When asked if commemorating the victims of Tiananmen would violate
the new security law, Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam last month said it
was important to show respect to the Party.
China has never provided a full account of the 1989 Tiananmen Square
violence. The death toll given by officials was about 300, most of
them soldiers, but rights groups and witnesses say thousands of
people may have died.
Wong received a 13-1/2 month sentence in December over an
anti-government rally on June 21, 2019 and a further four months
over an unauthorised protest in October 2019 while also breaking a
government law against wearing masks.
While in prison, Wong was arrested in January on suspicion of
breaking the new security law, introduced in July 2020, by taking
part in an unofficial vote to pick opposition candidates for a
since-postponed election, which authorities called a "vicious plot"
to "overthrow" the government.
(Reporting by Jessie Pang; Writing by Marius Zaharia; Editing by
Michael Perry)
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