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Hong Kong teen among 5 held under security law: police
by AFP Staff Writers
Hong Kong (AFP) May 6, 2021

US calls on Hong Kong to release Tiananmen vigil activists
Washington (AFP) May 7, 2021 - US Secretary of State Antony Blinken called for the release Friday of four Hong Kong democracy activists who were jailed for taking part in a vigil for victims of Beijing's 1989 Tiananmen Square crackdown.

"The United States stands with the people of Hong Kong and rejects the sentencing of activists for attending a Tiananmen commemoration," Blinken wrote on Twitter.

"All those imprisoned for nonviolent exercise of guaranteed freedoms should be freed immediately," he added.

Joshua Wong, Lester Shum, Tiffany Yuen and Janelle Leung -- four prominent youth activists in their twenties -- were jailed after pleading guilty to taking part in an "unauthorised assembly" last year on the 4 June Tiananmen anniversary.

For the past three decades, Hong Kong has marked the anniversary of Beijing's deadly 1989 repression of protests in Tiananmen Square with massive candlelight vigils.

But last year's event was banned for the first time, with police citing the coronavirus pandemic and security fears following huge democracy protests that roiled Hong Kong the year before.

Tens of thousands defied the ban and massed peacefully at the vigil's traditional site in Victoria Park.

Since then, prosecutors have brought charges against more than two dozen prominent democracy activists who showed up at the vigil, the latest in a string of criminal cases that have ensnared the city's beleaguered democracy movement.

Joshua Wong -- one of the city's most recognisable democracy activists, is currently serving 17.5 months in jail for two convictions linked to the 2019 demonstrations.

He was handed a consecutive 10 months of jail for the new conviction, which will start once current sentences are finished.

Shum, 27, was given six months while Yuen, 27, and Leung, 26, were both handed four months.

Wong, Shum and Yuen have also been charged under a new national security law Beijing imposed on the city last year to stamp out dissent. They face up to life in jail if convicted.

A 15-year-old was among five people arrested in Hong Kong under a sweeping national security law, police said Thursday, with local press reporting social media posts sparked their detention.

Officers from a specialist team in the financial hub arrested four men and one woman aged between 15 and 24 on suspicion of subversion.

Local reports said three of those detained were scooped up on Thursday morning during raids looking for members of a group called "Returning Valiant".

"Their comments left on social media could constitute the offences of secession and subversion under the national security law," a police source told the South China Morning Post daily.

It was reported the raids stemmed from a burglary probe in which four others were arrested.

A statement posted on Facebook by "Returning Valiant" said some of its members were arrested under the national security law and that lawyers were looking into the situation.

"Political suppression will not make us step back... We will continue to fight against the tyranny," the statement added.

Beijing blanketed Hong Kong in a sweeping national security law late last June in response to months of massive and often violent democracy protests that convulsed the city.

In July, four students including a 16-year-old were arrested over social media posts deemed to incite secession.

So far over 100 people -- mostly pro-democracy politicians and opposition figures, have also been arrested under the new law targeting acts of subversion, secession, terrorism and foreign collusion.

More than half of them have been prosecuted under the draconian law which carries a maximum penalty of life imprisonment if convicted.

Convicted Hong Kong journalist wins award for investigation
Hong Kong (AFP) May 6, 2021 - A Hong Kong journalist who was prosecuted over investigating an attack on democracy supporters by government loyalists won a prestigious press prize on Thursday, even after her employer backed out of the awards.

Bao Choy, a former producer with Hong Kong's public broadcaster RTHK, was found guilty last month of "knowingly making a false statement" to access number plate ownership records -- a conviction that was decried by media groups as an assault on public interest journalism.

On Thursday, Choy and five colleagues won the Chinese-language documentary award at the annual Human Rights Press Awards for their work "Who Owns the Truth?".

The awards recognise human rights reporting across Asia and have been running for 25 years.

Judges praised the RTHK documentary for "chasing the smallest clues, interrogating the powerful without fear or favour", and described the 23-minute documentary as "an investigative reporting classic".

The July 2019 attack in the district of Yuen Long by a gang of men armed with clubs -- and the police's failure to respond quickly enough -- was a turning point in the huge and often violent pro-democracy protests that year, further hammering public trust in the police force and city leaders.

RTHK used footage from witnesses and security cameras -- as well as number plate searches and interviews -- to piece together events.

It uncovered new details about the alleged attackers, some of whom have links to politically influential rural committees that support Beijing.

It also said that police failed to respond to the build-up of stick-wielding men, ferried into the district by specific vehicles that evening hours before the attack.

Police have rejected any accusation their officers failed the public that night and senior officers have since sought to recast the ambush as an evenly matched melee between two opposing sides.

- Changing news landscape -

Hong Kong maintains a publicly accessible licence plate database long used by journalists, including pro-Beijing news outlets.

But authorities introduced a rule change that meant journalists were no longer allowed to make searches.

Choy, 37, faced up to six months in jail but was ultimately fined HK$6,000 ($770). She plans to appeal her conviction.

Beijing has made no secret of its desire to see Hong Kong's critical media tamed and the city has slid down press freedom rankings in recent years.

RTHK has found itself a government target. Authorities have ordered an overhaul of the broadcaster, including the recent appointment of a career civil servant as its new head who has since pulled multiple shows for "one-sided views" and "inaccuracies".

RTHK suspended Choy after her November arrest and did not contribute to her legal defence.

It also announced it had withdrawn from all press award entries but many award organisations, including HRPA, declined to accept the withdrawal.

"During the transition period, RTHK decided not to nominate programmes for awards, would also withdraw their entries from those competitions, and would not accept related awards," a spokesperson said Thursday.

The station's Twitter account -- which has developed an irreverent outspokenness under the new management -- hinted at disquiet within the newsroom.

"#RTHK picks up more prizes, despite management's best efforts," the account wrote. "Bao Choy and Nabela Qoser, who've both been given their marching orders, are recognised in this year's Human Rights Press Awards."

Earlier this week, RTHK fired reporter Nabela Qoser who had become famous for her aggressive questioning of officials at press conferences.

A report she helped produced on the policing of protests won a commendation in the same category as Choy.


Related Links
Democracy in the 21st century at TerraDaily.com


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