Prominent activists and lawmakers arrested in Hong Kong police crackdown, fuelling tensions as protesters vow to defy march ban over the weekend
- Among those arrested are activists Joshua Wong, Agnes Chow and Andy Chan; lawmakers Cheng Chung-tai, Au Nok-hin and Jeremy Tam also held
- Pan-democrats slam arrests, saying timing is meant to suppress protest movement but will backfire and fuel greater anger
Tensions mounted in Hong Kong on Friday as police arrested prominent pro-democracy activists and at least three lawmakers in a crackdown ahead of a banned mass march as the city braced for the 13th straight weekend of anti-government protests.
Among those arrested were young activists Joshua Wong Chi-fung and Agnes Chow Ting, both from the political party Demosisto, Andy Chan Ho-tin, convenor of the now-outlawed Hong Kong National Party, and three pro-democracy lawmakers, Cheng Chung-tai, Au Nok-hin and Jeremy Tam Man-ho.
While police insisted the high-profile arrests had nothing to do with the Saturday protest – which was to mark the fifth anniversary of the announcement of a restrictive electoral reform package by Beijing that was eventually rejected by Hong Kong – Wong and Chow said their actions amounted to scare tactics to silence critics and inflict “white terror” on society.
Both were charged and granted bail. Speaking outside Eastern Court after he was freed, Wong vowed to fight on as he described the prosecutions as a bid to cow both the violent and peaceful demonstrators ahead of Saturday’s banned march.