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SINO DAILY
Joshua Wong leads young Hong Kong trio jailed for protests
By Su Xinqi and Jerome Taylor
Hong Kong (AFP) Dec 2, 2020

Prison pen pals: Hong Kongers keep in touch with jailed protesters
When Hong Kong protester Hei saw fellow activists put behind bars for taking part in last year's democracy protests, she was determined to keep the flame burning by writing them letters.

Thousands have been arrested and held in custody for a range of offences during the huge and sometimes violent protests that convulsed the financial hub last year.

The city's prison system strictly controls inmate access to information about life outside, so Hei decided to keep them up to date on the democracy movement by putting pen to paper. Her mailing list now has almost 60 people on it.

"It's a relationship between comrades-in-arms and we have trust in each other," the 22-year-old told AFP, asking to use just one name to protect her identity.

"We share the same pain. I hope letter-writing can strengthen people's confidence in the movement."

As well as writing handwritten letters, Hei puts together a DIY newspaper called "Pass the Day", which includes a summary of headlines, social media posts and political memes from online forums popular with protesters.

She also pays visits to activists, bringing books, snacks and daily necessities. Her friends jokingly refer to her as being "half jailed" by her commitment.

Of the more than 10,000 people arrested during protests since June 2019, more than 2,300 of those cases have proceeded to prosecution, according to authorities.

Hundreds are either held on remand ahead of their trials or are serving post-conviction sentences.

- Letters like 'candlelight' -

One of those jailed was 43-year-old Max, convicted of arson for throwing a book on a barricade bonfire lit by protesters.

During the four months he spent in prison, Max likened the letters to "nutrients" and recalled that he would like to reply to them immediately, while they were still "fresh and hot".

"When I was inside, it was like walking in a tunnel and I couldn't see any light," he recalled, speaking on condition that only his first name be used.

"These letters were like candlelight showing me the way to the other end."

Compared to permitted twice-monthly, half-hour visits, the letters were "the kind of support one can hold on to".

Without a proper desk and chair, he would spend hours writing letters on his cell bed, burning through three pens per month.

Prison regulations allow convicted inmates to send one free letter a week. Those wanting to send more must earn money for stamps through work. Incoming letters -- as well as books -- are also screened.

Since his release, Max continues to write to inmates and activists who are still in jail.

"I don't have much expectation on how these letters could extend the movement, but I do hope comrades can live a good life inside and find some mental support," he said.

- 'Not alone' -

The letter-writing campaign has been championed by former lawmaker Shiu Ka-Chun.

Since January, more than 5,000 letters from the public have been sent and 500 pen pals have been paired up.

"This is the beauty of this movement. People find their own positions and roles to show support," Shiu told AFP.

Aside from writing letters, Shiu was also involved in campaigns to help inmates send flowers to their loved ones outside and arrange learning materials for younger inmates.

"I hope more people can continue to write to our friends in custody and let them know they are not alone," he said.

Jennifer, a 30-year-old office worker, described the crushing of the democracy movement as "really dark" and says she feels frustrated that much peaceful dissent has been outlawed.

She has written 48 letters so far to prisoners, something she says helps her process her own feelings as well as providing comfort to her pen pals.

Leading Hong Kong dissident Joshua Wong was jailed alongside two other young activists on Wednesday for taking part in last year's huge democracy protests as the crackdown on Beijing's critics gathers pace.

Wong, 24, was prosecuted alongside his close friends and fellow campaigners Ivan Lam and Agnes Chow over a rally outside the police headquarters.

"The days ahead will be tough but we will hang in there," Wong shouted as he was led away.

The three -- some of the city's most visible critics of Beijing's rule -- pleaded guilty to various charges including inciting an unlawful assembly.

"The defendants called on protesters to besiege the headquarters and chanted slogans that undermined the police force," Magistrate Wong Sze-lai said as she handed Wong 13.5 months in jail.

"Immediate imprisonment is the only appropriate option."

Chow, who burst in tears as the sentence was read out, received 10 months and Lam got seven months.

Hong Kong was convulsed by seven straight months of huge and often violent rallies in which millions took to the streets.

Beijing has refused demands for universal suffrage and authorities have pursued democracy supporters with criminal cases and a tough new security law.

The tactics have stifled the movement and restored a semblance of calm.

But the finance hub remains deeply polarised with many still seething against Beijing's growing hold on the semi-autonomous city.

- Teen origins -

Despite their youth, Wong and Lam have already spent time in prison for leading democracy protests.

"All these pains and sufferings would only strengthen our courage and conviction for democracy and justice," Wong wrote on Twitter ahead of his sentencing. "Cages cannot lock up souls."

Nathan Law, a student protest leader who also spent time behind bars and fled Hong Kong for Britain earlier this year, said jailing those pushing for democracy would not end their influence.

"I don't believe prison will bring them down," he told AFP. "I believe they will continue to be very important people to Hong Kong in the future."

"Movements have cycles so we must learn to devote ourselves during high tide and stick to our aspirations at low tide," he added.

Wong, Chow, 23 and Lam, 26, joined Hong Kong's pro-democracy movement when they were in their teens.

All three organised successful rallies in 2012 against plans to make Hong Kong's education system more "patriotic".

And they played prominent roles two years later in the "Umbrella Movement" -- a 79-day peaceful occupation by a largely student-led campaign calling for universal suffrage.

Leading figures from those protests, including Wong, were jailed and the democracy movement struggled in the years after.

But it exploded onto the streets once more in June 2019, sparked by plans to allow extraditions to mainland China and its opaque legal system.

Millions took to the streets over the next seven months in a deliberately leaderless campaign mostly organised via social media calling for greater democracy and police accountability.

Riot police unleashed thousands of rounds of tear gas and rubber bullets and were frequently filmed using batons to beat arrested demonstrators.

Small groups of hardline activists resorted to rocks, petrol bombs and widespread vandalism.

- Security law -

Figures like Wong and Chow joined some of the protests and also used their celebrity status over the years to lobby for international sanctions, a move that infuriated Beijing with state media casting them as traitors.

Earlier this summer, Beijing imposed a broad security law which ramps up its direct control over the city and outlaws certain political views.

More than 10,000 people have been arrested over the last 18 months and most of Hong Kong's leading activists and opposition figures face prosecution.

"The suppression is not only targeting prominent figures. It comes from all directions and is going after all kinds of people," Isaac Cheng, a friend of Wong's and former vice chairman of their now-defunct political party Demosisto, told AFP.

Chow is being investigated under the security law for allegedly "conspiring with foreign forces" by pushing for sanctions.

Wong is among another group of activists being prosecuted for a vigil marking the anniversary of Beijing's 1989 Tiananmen crackdown earlier this year.

Beijing says security has been restored.

But Cheng described a sense of despondency among many younger Hong Kongers.

"We thought this place belongs to us but it now turns out to be a crime if a student thinks differently from the government," he said.


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SINO DAILY
Cash and Carrie: US sanctioned Hong Kong leader has no bank account
Hong Kong (AFP) Nov 28, 2020
Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam said she has "piles of cash" at home as she has no bank account after the United States slapped sanctions on her in response to a draconian security law China imposed on the city. Lam was targeted, along with 14 other senior city officials, in the toughest US action on Hong Kong since Beijing imposed the new law on the territory in late June. The move by Washington freezes the American assets of the 15 officials and criminalises any financial transactions in the Unite ... read more

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