Hong Kong activists sentenced for banned Tiananmen vigil
Media tycoon Jimmy Lai, 74, who is already in prison, receives 13-month sentence to be served concurrently.
Eight Hong Kong pro-democracy activists have been sentenced to up to 14 months in prison for organising, taking part in and inciting participation in a banned vigil last year commemorating the victims of China’s 1989 Tiananmen Square crackdown.
The sentencing on Monday is the latest blow to the city’s democracy movement, which has seen dozens of activists arrested, jailed or fleeing the Chinese-ruled territory since Beijing imposed a sweeping national security law last year.
Judge Amanda Woodcock said the defendants “ignored and belittled a genuine public health crisis” and “wrongly and arrogantly believed” in commemorating June 4 in Hong Kong’s Victoria Park rather than protecting the health of the community.
Media tycoon Jimmy Lai, 74, who is already in jail, barrister Chow Hang Tung, 36, and activist Gwyneth Ho, 31, received sentences of 13, 12 and 6 months, respectively. They were found guilty by the court last Thursday.
The three, those with the highest profile of the eight, had pleaded not guilty to all charges.
Media mogul Jimmy Lai arrives at the Court of Final Appeal for hearing an appeal by the Department of Justice against his bail decision, in Hong Kong on December 31, 2020 [File:Tyrone Siu/Reuters]
“If commemorate (sic) those who died because of injustice is a crime, then inflict on me that crime and let me suffer the punishment of this crime, so I may share the burden and glory of those young men and women who shed their blood on June 4th to proclaim truth, justice and goodness,” Lai, the owner of the now-shuttered pro-democracy Apple Daily newspaper, said in a mitigation letter, handwritten in prison, ahead of sentencing.
Chow, in her mitigation said: “If those in power had wished to kill the movement with prosecution and imprisonment, they shall be sorely disappointed. Indeed what they have done is breathe new life into the movement, rallying a new generation to this long struggle for truth, justice and democracy.”
Five others who had pleaded guilty, including Lee Cheuk-yan, leader of the now-disbanded vigil organiser Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements in China, were sentenced to between just over 4 months and 14 months.
“If there was a provocateur, it is the regime that fired at its own people,” an emotional Lee, who received the highest sentence of 14 months, told the court on November 17.
“If I must go to jail to affirm my will, then so be it.”
Sentences to run concurrently
Multiple defendants are already serving jail time and their new sentences run concurrently meaning most will only see a few extra weeks or months added.
Activists such as Lai, Ho, Chow and Lee also face separate national security prosecutions that could lead to life in prison.
Sixteen other activists are already serving sentences of 4-10 months related to the 2020 vigil. Two democracy campaigners facing similar charges over the vigil, Nathan Law and Sunny Cheung, have fled Hong Kong.
After mass pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong in 2019, the global financial hub has taken a swift authoritarian turn with Beijing’s imposition of a sweeping national security law last year affecting many aspects of life in the city.
China has never provided a full account of the 1989 crackdown on protest there that centred on Beijing’s Tiananmen Square.
The death toll given by officials days later was about 300, most of them soldiers, but rights groups and witnesses say thousands of protesters may have been killed.