Police in Hong Kong halted a four-person pro-democracy protest on China’s National Day Friday amid an expanding crackdown on free speech and opposition politics. Chanting and carrying a placard calling for the release of Hong Kongers arrested in the crackdown and chanting pro-democracy slogans, the four members of the opposition party League of Social Democrats had attempted to march to the harbor-side Convention Center where the official celebration was being held, the AP reports. Dozens of officers, part of a massive police presence deployed to prevent any disruptions on the day, surrounded them and kept them out of sight and earshot of officials attending a flag-raising ceremony.
"I think Hong Kong is now the only place in China where diverse opinions are allowed," Chan Po-ying, the party's chairperson, told reporters. Chan noted the extensive security measures deployed, but added that, "Even under such pressure, we still need to hang on to our most basic civil rights, which is the freedom of speech and assembly." Restrictions have made such protests a rare occurrence and Hong Kong’s government has arrested three leaders of the group that organized an annual candlelight vigil commemorating victims of the military’s crushing of 1989 pro-democracy protests centered on Beijing’s Tiananmen Square.
The leaders have been charged with subversion under a national security law imposed on the city by Beijing following months of anti-government protests in 1989 that criminalizes subversion, secession, terrorism and foreign collusion to interfere in the city’s affairs. Such measures have led to the US imposing sanctions on Hong Kong and Chinese officials, saying the new law rolls back freedoms promised to the former British colony when it was handed over to China in 1997. Over the past year, dozens of pro-democracy activists have been arrested and others have left for self-imposed exile abroad, while electoral laws have been amended to increase the number of seats for pro-Beijing legislators while reducing those that are directly elected.
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