Hong Kong Security Law

Group behind Hong Kong’s annual Tiananmen vigil disbands amid probe

Reuters

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Group behind Hong Kong’s annual Tiananmen vigil disbands amid probe

DISBANDED. Richard Tsoi, secretary of the Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements of China, speaks to media after it was announced that the group will disband, in Hong Kong on September 25, 2021.

Tyrone Siu/Reuters

The Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements in China faces national security charges

A Hong Kong group that organizes an annual vigil on June 4 to remember protesters killed in China’s 1989 Tiananmen Square crackdown will disband, it said on Saturday, September 25, after facing national security charges.

The democracy group is the latest of dozens of civil society bodies to fold over the past year, from a key trade union grouping to the largest teachers’ union, after Beijing imposed a sweeping national security law in the city.

“I believe Hong Kong people, no matter their capacity, will continue to commemorate June 4 as before,” Richard Tsoi, the secretary of the group, the Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements in China, told reporters.

A vote on Saturday to disband was supported by 41 of its members with four opposed, Tsoi said.

Authorities froze HK$2.2 million ($283,000) of the group’s assets this month after it was charged with inciting subversion under the new law.

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Activist group Student Politicism, which had four current and former members charged this week, will also close, it said on its Facebook page on Friday, September 24.

Hong Kong authorities have repeatedly denied curbing human rights and freedoms, saying law enforcement has been based on evidence and has nothing to do with the background, profession, or political beliefs of those arrested.

An authoritarian chill cloaks most aspects of life in the former British colony after the new law, which prescribes terms of up to life in jail for anything China deems to be subversion, secession, terrorism, and collusion with foreign forces.

Since the new law was introduced, most democratic politicians and activists have been jailed or fled abroad.

Alliance leaders Albert Ho and Lee Cheuk-yan, already jailed over large anti-government protests in 2019 that roiled the city, were also charged with inciting subversion, as well as another of its officials, vice chairwoman Chow Hang Tung.

Group members Tang Ngok-kwan, Leung Kam-wai, Chan To-wai, and Tsui Hon-kwong have been charged with failing to provide information police had sought by a deadline of September 7.

Police asked for details about the group’s membership, finances, and activities in an August letter it sent to reporters.

The letter accused the Alliance of being “an agent of foreign forces” and said missing the deadline could result in a fine of HK$100,000 ($13,000) and six months in jail.

This month, police raided the premises of the closed June 4th Museum dedicated to the Tiananmen victims.

In August, the group had said the museum, which closed on June 2 over a licensing investigation by authorities, had re-opened online as the independently operated “8964 Museum.”

Hong Kong traditionally holds the world’s largest annual June 4 vigil, although police banned the last two events over coronavirus concerns. Mainland China bans commemorations and heavily censors the topic.

China has never provided a full account of the 1989 crackdown. Officials gave a death toll of about 300 days afterwards, but rights groups and witnesses say thousands may have been killed.

Hong Kong returned to China in 1997 under a “one country, two systems” formula that guaranteed its freedoms and independent legal system. China denies interfering with its way of life. – Rappler.com

($1=HK$7.7854)

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