Hong Kong police issue arrest warrants for eight overseas activists
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[July 03, 2023]
By James Pomfret and Jessie Pang
HONG KONG (Reuters) -Hong Kong police on Monday accused eight
overseas-based activists of serious national security offences including
foreign collusion and incitement to secession and offered rewards for
information leading to any arrest.
The accused are activists Nathan Law, Anna Kwok and Finn Lau, former
lawmakers Dennis Kwok and Ted Hui, lawyer and legal scholar Kevin Yam,
unionist Mung Siu-tat, and online commentator Yuan Gong-yi, police told
a press conference.
Issuing wanted notices and rewards of HK$1 million ($127,656) each,
police said the assets of the accused would be frozen where possible and
they warned the public not to support them financially or face the risk
of violating the law.
"They have encouraged sanctions ... to destroy Hong Kong and to
intimidate officials," Steve Li, an officer with the police's national
security department, told reporters.
The activists are based in various places including the United States,
Britain and Australia.
They are wanted under a national security law that Beijing imposed on
the former British colony in 2020, after the financial hub was rocked by
protracted anti-China protests the previous year.
Some countries, including the United States, say the law has been used
to suppress the city's pro-democracy movement and it has undermined
rights and freedoms guaranteed under a "one country, two systems"
formula, agreed when Hong Kong returned to Chinese rule in 1997.
Chinese and Hong Kong authorities say the law has restored the stability
necessary for preserving Hong Kong's economic success.
Yam, contacted by Reuters, said he would continue to criticise what he
described as "tyranny".
"It's my duty ... to continue to speak out against the crackdown that is
going on right now, against the tyranny that is now reigning over the
city that was once one of the freest in Asia," Yam, a senior fellow with
Georgetown University's Center for Asian Law, told Reuters by telephone
from Australia.
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Pro-democracy activist Nathan Law is
interviewed by journalists outside the Final Court of Appeal after
being granted bail in Hong Kong, China October 24, 2017.
REUTERS/Bobby Yip/File Photo
"All they want to do is try to make a show of their view that the
national security law has extra-territorial effect," said Yam, who
police accused of meeting foreign officials to instigate sanctions
against Hong Kong officials, judges and prosecutors.
"I miss Hong Kong but as things stand, no rational person would be
going back."
The seven others gave no immediate comment to Reuters.
'LAW-DEFYING IDEAS'
Police told the press conference 260 people had been arrested under
the national security law, with 79 of them convicted of offences
including subversion and terrorism.
Li said police were merely enforcing the law.
"We are definitely not putting on a political show nor disseminating
fear," Li said, adding that chances of prosecution were slim if the
defendants remained abroad.
"If they don't return, we won’t be able to arrest them, that's a
fact," he said. "But we won't stop wanting them."
Hong Kong's Security Bureau said it supported the police in their
effort to "bring to justice people who have absconded overseas" and
for promoting "law-defying ideas through both physical and online
channels".
British-based rights group Hong Kong Watch said in a statement
Britain, the U.S. and Australia should issue statements
"guaranteeing the safety of those activists named and the wider Hong
Kong community living overseas".
(Reporting by James Pomfret and Jessie Pang; Editing by Robert
Birsel)
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