Hong Kong activists to be sentenced

Hong Kong activists to be sentenced

Former lawmakers Martin Lee (L) and Albert Ho arrive at West Kowloon court in Hong Kong to receive sentencing after being found guilty of organising an unauthorised assembly in 2019. (AFP photo)
Former lawmakers Martin Lee (L) and Albert Ho arrive at West Kowloon court in Hong Kong to receive sentencing after being found guilty of organising an unauthorised assembly in 2019. (AFP photo)

HONG KONG: Nine veteran Hong Kong democracy activists, including publisher Jimmy Lai, will be sentenced on Friday for their roles in one of the city's biggest-ever protests.

Organisers say 1.7 million people — almost one quarter of Hong Kong's population — turned out for a huge rally that formed the backbone of demonstrations that wracked the city throughout 2019.

The nine include some of Hong Kong's most prominent democracy campaigners, many of whom have spent decades advocating non-violence in their ultimately fruitless campaign for universal suffrage.

They are the latest in a string of anti-establishment figures to face the courts as China implements a sweeping crackdown on dissent.

Supporters, family members, journalists and diplomats — representing the EU, the United States, Canada, Sweden, Australia, and Germany — were present at the hearing.

Among the defendants are Martin Lee, 82, a respected barrister known as the "father of democracy" in Hong Kong, who was once chosen by Beijing to help write the city's mini-constitution.

They also include Margaret Ng, a 73-year-old barrister and former opposition lawmaker.

Media tycoon Lai, 73, was brought to the court from custody, where he is being held after arrest under Beijing's new national security law.

All nine were convicted of organising an unauthorised assembly on August 18, 2019, which called for democracy and greater police accountability.

Five defendants who had earlier pleaded not guilty submitted their mitigation on Friday morning.

"There is no right so precious to the people of Hong Kong as the freedom of expression and the freedom of peaceful assembly," said barrister Margaret Ng who discharged her legal team and gave her statement in person.

She added that she's prepared to stand with and stand up for the people who "in the last resort, had to give collective expression of their anguish and urge the government to respond".

"I stand the law's good servant but the people's first," said Ng, whose submission ended with a round of loud applause in courtroom.

Judge Amanda Woodcock earlier said in her verdict that the march had caused serious traffic disruption and the fact the march was peaceful was no defence.

The sentencing is expected to be handed down later on Friday.

The months-long rallies in 2019 often descended into clashes between riot police and a knot of hardcore participants, and posed the most concerted challenge to China's rule since the former British colony's 1997 handover.

Since then, authorities unleashed a broad crackdown with the imposition of a sweeping security law that criminalises much dissent, and passed a radical overhaul of the city's electoral system.

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