Hong Kong detains 47 activists on subversion charges

Hong Kong police on Sunday detained 47 pro-democracy activists on charges of conspiracy to commit subversion under the city’s national security law, in the largest mass charge against the semi-autonomous Chinese territory’s opposition camp since the law came into effect last June.
The former lawmakers and democracy
advocates had been previously arrested in a sweeping police operation in
January but were released. They have been detained again and will appear in
court on Monday, police said in a statement.
They allegedly violated the
national security law that was imposed by Beijing for participating in
unofficial election primaries for Hong Kong’s legislature last year.
The defendants include 39 men and
eight women aged between 23 and 64, police said.
The move is part of a continuing
crackdown on the city’s democracy movement, with a string of arrests and
prosecutions of Hong Kong’s democracy proponents — including outspoken
activists Joshua Wong and Jimmy Lai — following months of anti-government
protests in 2019.
The pro-democracy camp had held
the primaries to determine the best candidates to field to win a majority in
the legislature and had plans to vote down major bills that would eventually
force Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam to resign.
In January, 55 activists and
former lawmakers were arrested for their roles in the primaries.
Authorities said that the
activists’ participation was part of a plan to paralyze the city’s legislature
and subvert state power.
The legislative election that
would have followed the unofficial primaries was postponed by a year by Lam,
who cited public health risks during the coronavirus pandemic. Mass
resignations and disqualifications of pro-democracy lawmakers have left the
legislature largely a pro-Beijing body.
Among those arrested on Sunday was
former lawmaker Eddie Chu. A post on his official Twitter account confirmed
that he was being charged for conspiracy to commit subversion and that he was
denied bail.
“Thank you to the people of Hong Kong for giving
me the opportunity to contribute to society in the past 15 years,” Chu said in
a post on his Facebook page.
Another candidate in the
primaries, Winnie Yu, was also charged and will appear in court on Monday,
according to a post on her official Facebook page.
American lawyer John Clancey, a
member of the now-defunct political rights group “Power for Democracy” who was
arrested in January for his involvement in the primary, was not among those
detained on Sunday.
“I will give full support to those who have been
charged and will be facing trial, because from my perspective, they have done
nothing wrong,” Clancey told reporters.
The security law criminalizes acts
of subversion, secession, terrorism and collusion with foreign powers to
intervene in Hong Kong’s affairs. Serious offenders could face a maximum
punishment of life imprisonment. Nearly 100 people have been arrested since the
law was implemented.