Thursday, December 9, 2021

Yet another sad day involving guilty verdicts and arrests in Hong Kong

 
A banner which was hanging in Taikoo Shing for 
the better part of this year but no longer
 

A recap:on the evening that Joe Chen carried out his acts of violence outside the Cityplaza mall in Tai Koo Shing, a pro-democracy protest had taken place inside of it that was broken up by riot police.  And on the very evening itself, it had been reported that "he had been arguing in support of Beijing with bystanders and spoke Mandarin".  It thus is the case that Joe Chen is one of the rare pro-Beijingers who has had a court decision go against him -- and I get the feeling it's not entirely coincidental that his was a trial by jury (unlike, say, the trials of every national security law defendant to date, including Tong Ying-kit -- who had sought but failed to have a jury for his trial).  

Something else I think worth pointing out about this affair: Andrew Chiu wasn't initially involved in it but had stepped in to try to stop Joe Chen's attacks on the other three victims.  Put another way: the then district councillor put his body on the line to protect others.  A reminder: we also saw the likes of Wu Chi-wai, Ted Hui and Eddie Chu Hoi-dick do so at extradition bill-turned-pro-democracy protests. A question: can you imagine any of the 2021 LegCo hopefuls doing the same (for us)?  
 
Another pro-democracy personality who would be a worthy candidate for a profile in courage is the man who celebrated his 74th birthday behind bars yesterday: Apple Daily founder Jimmy Lai.  Sadly, more bad news came his way this morning when judge Amanda Woodcock found him, Chow Hang-tung and Gwyneth Ho guilty of taking part in and inciting an "unauthorized assembly" at Victoria Park on June 4th last year.  
 
For many of us, the guilty verdict was not unexpected (especially given who the presiding judge was) but no less sad to learn.  For, as the AFP report (which appears in The Guardian, among other publications) notes: "Lai, Chow and Ho are among dozens of activists already behind bars facing separate prosecutions under a strict national security law that Beijing imposed on Hong Kong in the wake of huge and often violent democracy protests two years ago"; and "their prosecution is the latest illustration of how much the gap has narrowed between Hong Kong and the mainland, where authorities have long sought to scrub memories and official records of Tiananmen."   
 
 
 
In point of fact, what the six people arrested (thus far) in Hong Kong for alleged blank ballot calls actually appear to have just done is share Ted Hui's message regarding what to do on December 19th on social media.  And yes, this begs the question: "How far are we to being arrested for “liking” [those same or similar posts]?"!   

2 comments:

peppylady (Dora) said...

I don't understand everything that goes on in your area. But Thank you for sharing it with rest of the world.
Coffee is on and stay safe

YTSL said...

Hi peppylady --

Thank you for reading and caring.