25 December 2024

Getty Images Tony Chung, wearing a blue jacket and holding a Hong Kong independence flag, is surrounded by dozens of protesters carrying pro-democracy flags and banners.Getty Images

Tony Chung, who fled Hong Kong last year and is currently in the UK, is among the people being sought by police

Hong Kong police have offered rewards of HK$1 million (£103,000; US$129,000) for information leading to the arrest of six pro-democracy activists living in the United Kingdom and Canada.

Among them is Tony Chung, the former leader of a pro-independence group He fled to the UK last year.

The group – which includes a former regional council member, actor and YouTuber – is lobbying for more democracy in the province. They are all accused of violating the city's national security law.

Human Rights Watch said the arrest orders were “a cowardly act of intimidation aimed at silencing the people of Hong Kong” and called on the UK and Canadian governments to respond.

Also among those wanted are former district councilor Carmen Lau and activist Chloe Cheung. Both are based in the UK and lobby on behalf of two NGOs demanding greater democracy in Hong Kong.

Hong Kong police have issued arrest warrants for political commentator and pollster Chung Kim Wah, who left Hong Kong for the United Kingdom in 2022, as well as two people residing in Canada: former actor Joseph Tai, who co-founded the Hong Kong NGO Station Hong Kong. And YouTuber Victor Hu.

Mr. Hu was charged with subversion while the other six were charged with incitement to secession and collusion with a foreign country or external forces.

According to Hong Kong's public broadcaster, the city's top police commanders on Tuesday announced the arrest warrants, accusing some of the wanted activists of repeatedly asking foreign countries to impose sanctions and other measures against China and Hong Kong.

Chung was first convicted in 2021 on charges of calling for Hong Kong secession, and was released in June last year.

He posted on Instagram on Tuesday that it was “a great honor to become the first Hong Kong citizen to be charged twice under the National Security Law.”

Chung said the news was not surprising to him because he had violated a probation order after his release from prison by fleeing to the UK last year.

“I knew this day would come. From the moment I decided to leave Hong Kong, I was fully aware that I would not be able to return for a long time,” he wrote.

Getty Images Carmen Lau wearing a black coat and blue hair tie reads a letter from her phone at a protest outside Downing Street in 2022.Getty Images

Carmen Lau is also based in the UK and advocates for greater democracy in Hong Kong

Ms. Lau posted on X that the arrest warrant would not stop her advocacy work. The governments of the United Kingdom, the United States and the European Union called for sanctions to be imposed on “human rights perpetrators in Hong Kong.”

It also asked the UK Labor government to seriously reconsider its strategies to address cross-border repression targeting Hong Kong residents “and to consider blocking the expansion of China's embassy in Tower Hill.”

Earlier this month, Tower Hamlets councillors They voted unanimously to reject plans to build a new Chinese embassy. However, the ruling is only advisory and non-binding, and it will be up to the Deputy Prime Minister and Communities Minister Angela Rayner to decide whether or not permission will be granted.

This is the third round of arrest warrants and rewards issued since the national security law was imposed in Beijing.

The first two rounds were issued in July and December last year, targeting former MP Nathan Law – who told the BBC last year that… His life has become more dangerous since the reward was announced – Simon Cheng, former employee of the UK Consulate He was detained in 2019 in a high-profile case. Both men now reside in the United Kingdom.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Mao Ning supported the move on Tuesday as the Chinese government supported Hong Kong “in performing its duties in accordance with the law.”

She added that Hong Kong is “a society governed by the rule of law and no one has extrajudicial privileges.”

It was Hong Kong's controversial national security law imposed in 2020 In response to the 2019 anti-government protests that rocked the city for months.

Beijing and Hong Kong authorities say the law is necessary to maintain stability and deny it has weakened autonomy, but critics say it has reduced the city's autonomy and made a wide range of opposition actions illegal.

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