Hong Kong police arrest three members of student prisoner-support group
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[September 20, 2021]
HONG KONG (Reuters) - Hong Kong
police arrested on Monday three members of a pro-democracy student
group, accusing them of a "conspiracy to incite subversion" including by
helping deliver snacks to prisoners with the aim of recruiting
followers.
Hong Kong police have arrested more than 100 people under a national
security law that Beijing imposed on the former British colony in June
last year that critics say erodes the freedoms promised when it returned
to Chinese rule in 1997.
Beijing and the city's government say the law is necessary to safeguard
Hong Kong's prosperity and guard against outside interference.
Police Senior Superintendent Steve Li told reporters police arrested two
men and one woman, aged 18-20, saying they incited hatred of the
government and had urged others not to obey the law and subvert state
power. He did not identify them.
Li said a group known as Student Politicism had set up street booths to
spread what he called hateful speech against the government, including
urging people not to use a government app aimed at tracking the spread
of the coronavirus.
Police raided the group’s warehouse and seized large quantities of
sweets, surgical masks, biscuits, lotion, and books - all items on a
list of goods prisoners are allowed to receive from outside - as
evidence.
But Li suggested democracy activists were using the items to win over
followers in prison.
"Helping prisoners is not a problem but it depends on the intention," Li
said.
"If the intention is to help prisoners with the same beliefs and to
recruit followers ... to continue to violate national security, it is a
problem for sure."
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Convenor of Student Politicism Wong Yat-chin is detained by police,
in Hong Kong, China, September 20, 2021. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu
The group also used slogans declared illegal under
the new national security law and told people to "prepare for the
next revolution", Li said.
The group said on its Facebook page two of its leaders, Wong Yat-chin
and Chan Chi-sum, were among the three arrested. It did not identify
the third person. It did not respond to a request for comment.
Wall-fare, a prisoners' rights group that provided supplies for
prisoners and connected them with pen-pals, disbanded last week
after Hong Kong Security Chief Chris Tang had said inmates uses
items including sweets to recruit followers inside prison and
endanger national security.
The national security law punishes what China considers secession,
subversion, terrorism and collusion with foreign forces with up to
life in prison.
Many of the city's most prominent pro-democracy politicians and
activists are in jail, either under the new legislation or after
being convicted on other charges.
(Reporting by Jessie Pang; Editing by Robert Birsel)
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