Hong Kong: 11 more national security arrests over attempted boat escape to Taiwan

Hong Kong police have arrested 11 people under the national security law for allegedly helping 12 pro-democracy activists accused of attempting to flee the city by boat for Taiwan last year, local media and activists have reported.

Police arrested eight men and three women aged 18 to 72 for “assisting offenders”, according to the South China Morning Post, which cited unnamed sources.

Daniel Wong Kwok-tung, a lawyer who tried to help the 12 people detained in mainland China last August, was among those arrested.

Wong wrote on Facebook that police arrived at his apartment at 6am on Thursday.

A member of the city’s Democratic party, Wong is known for providing legal assistance to hundreds of protesters arrested during the anti-government protests in Hong Kong in 2019. He said he did not know to which police station he would be taken.

Police told Reuters they were still gathering information and could not make any immediate comment.

Local media said those arrested were suspected of assisting the 12 Hong Kong residents, who faced charges related to anti-government protests in the Chinese-ruled city in 2019, in their attempt to flee last year. The group of 12 was arrested at sea as they tried to escape to Taiwan by speedboat.

In late December, a Chinese court sentenced 10 of them to between seven months and three years in prison for illegally crossing the border, in a case that drew international attention and concern over the treatment of the activists.

Two, who were minors at the time of arrest, have been returned to Hong Kong.

The detainees’ families said they had been denied access to independent lawyers and aired suspicion that Hong Kong authorities helped in China’s arrests.

Self-ruled Taiwan has become a popular destination for Hong Kong pro-democracy activists since Beijing imposed a national security law in June 2020, a move that critics say is aimed at stamping out dissent and curbing freedoms.

More than 100 people have been arrested under the national security law.

On Thursday, the telecom provider the Hong Kong Broadband Network admitted it had blocked an anti-government website in order to comply with the law. It is believed to be the first time the law has been used by police to censor online content without involving the courts.

The confirmation followed local media reports over the weekend that police had ordered providers to restrict access to HKChronicles, a pro-democracy platform that gathered and published information during the 2019 mass protests, including the identities of police officers.

Hong Kong returned to Chinese rule in 1997 with the guarantee of freedoms not enjoyed on the mainland, including freedom of speech and assembly. Democracy activists say Communist party rulers in China are eroding those freedoms, a charge Beijing rejects.

The us and European Union have called for the activists to be released and allowed to return to Hong Kong.

source: theguardian.com