The Prague Post - Hong Kong arrests 4 for 'seditious' acts on Tiananmen anniversary eve

EUR -
AED 4.278283
AFN 80.434184
ALL 97.629354
AMD 447.549651
ANG 2.084633
AOA 1068.117051
ARS 1490.141744
AUD 1.784976
AWG 2.096631
AZN 2.05502
BAM 1.956388
BBD 2.350907
BDT 141.3525
BGN 1.955231
BHD 0.439085
BIF 3470.043336
BMD 1.164795
BND 1.494549
BOB 8.045419
BRL 6.454364
BSD 1.16435
BTN 100.237138
BWP 15.6327
BYN 3.810446
BYR 22829.986278
BZD 2.338803
CAD 1.597686
CDF 3361.598554
CHF 0.931958
CLF 0.029254
CLP 1122.688171
CNY 8.367542
CNH 8.360376
COP 4655.604952
CRC 587.576666
CUC 1.164795
CUP 30.867073
CVE 110.298163
CZK 24.629242
DJF 207.132278
DKK 7.464113
DOP 70.321143
DZD 151.700727
EGP 57.553003
ERN 17.471928
ETB 161.780442
FJD 2.622884
FKP 0.868431
GBP 0.866567
GEL 3.156085
GGP 0.868431
GHS 12.13865
GIP 0.868431
GMD 83.30256
GNF 10103.037674
GTQ 8.939688
GYD 243.603244
HKD 9.141156
HNL 30.473162
HRK 7.533544
HTG 152.875965
HUF 399.015165
IDR 18992.684911
ILS 3.911056
IMP 0.868431
INR 100.314145
IQD 1525.258599
IRR 49052.438022
ISK 142.198458
JEP 0.868431
JMD 186.195983
JOD 0.825857
JPY 172.976168
KES 150.433383
KGS 101.860918
KHR 4666.443119
KMF 495.612935
KPW 1048.357559
KRW 1618.051824
KWD 0.35588
KYD 0.970292
KZT 620.706627
LAK 25109.549672
LBP 104325.767563
LKR 351.285621
LRD 233.452196
LSL 20.615298
LTL 3.439337
LVL 0.704573
LYD 6.324516
MAD 10.528566
MDL 19.805955
MGA 5181.557936
MKD 61.578515
MMK 2445.201389
MNT 4177.683614
MOP 9.413311
MRU 46.316926
MUR 53.206973
MVR 17.9343
MWK 2019.007054
MXN 21.795788
MYR 4.945757
MZN 74.499728
NAD 20.615298
NGN 1780.774001
NIO 42.852885
NOK 11.836806
NPR 160.379221
NZD 1.949308
OMR 0.447842
PAB 1.16435
PEN 4.144546
PGK 4.82145
PHP 66.41202
PKR 331.606904
PLN 4.248685
PYG 9011.709545
QAR 4.233473
RON 5.074893
RSD 117.128288
RUB 91.432882
RWF 1682.520327
SAR 4.369251
SBD 9.666457
SCR 16.720299
SDG 699.460678
SEK 11.256883
SGD 1.495195
SHP 0.915346
SLE 26.615832
SLL 24425.177926
SOS 665.400065
SRD 43.33974
STD 24108.909305
STN 24.507369
SVC 10.188063
SYP 15145.166463
SZL 20.611197
THB 37.731793
TJS 11.20687
TMT 4.088431
TND 3.422929
TOP 2.728061
TRY 47.033423
TTD 7.904377
TWD 34.224597
TZS 3035.208245
UAH 48.62592
UGX 4172.254469
USD 1.164795
UYU 46.924109
UZS 14738.431395
VES 136.240263
VND 30471.042909
VUV 139.440623
WST 3.067249
XAF 656.15992
XAG 0.030428
XAU 0.000347
XCD 3.147917
XCG 2.098431
XDR 0.817428
XOF 656.154285
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.12365
ZAR 20.625221
ZMK 10484.551487
ZMW 26.809061
ZWL 375.063585
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

Hong Kong arrests 4 for 'seditious' acts on Tiananmen anniversary eve
Hong Kong arrests 4 for 'seditious' acts on Tiananmen anniversary eve / Photo: Yan ZHAO - AFP

Hong Kong arrests 4 for 'seditious' acts on Tiananmen anniversary eve

Police arrested four people in Hong Kong for "seditious" acts and "disorderly conduct" on Saturday, on the eve of the 34th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square crackdown.

Text size:

The bloody 1989 clampdown in Beijing is a highly sensitive topic for China's communist leadership, and commemoration of the hundreds killed -- by some estimates, more than 1,000 -- has long been forbidden in the mainland.

For decades, Hong Kong was the only Chinese city with large-scale public Tiananmen commemoration, but the annual vigil has been banned following the imposition of a national security law on the city in 2020.

Around the busy shopping district of Causeway Bay on Saturday, AFP reporters witnessed police bundling several performance artists -- some of whom appeared to be doing nothing -- into police vans.

Late Saturday evening, the police said four people had been arrested "for disorderly conduct in a public place" and "doing acts with seditious intent".

Four others were suspected of "breaching the peace" and were detained "to assist with the investigation," the police said on its official Facebook page.

They did not name the people arrested and detained.

Earlier, artist Sanmu Chen had repeatedly chanted "Don't forget June 4! Hong Kong people, don't be afraid of them!" at a bustling Causeway Bay street.

An officer shouted at him to "stop doing seditious acts" before authorities bundled him into a police bus.

Another well-known performance artist Chan Mei-tung was also taken away, with police refusing to provide the reason for her detention.

Chan was wandering around before she was stopped and searched by police, AFP reporters witnessed.

She was detained last year as well on the anniversary's eve. Her offending piece last year was whittling a potato into the shape of a candle and holding a lighter to it.

Before it was banned, thousands of candles were distributed at the annual Tiananmen vigil.

Thousands of candles would be distributed at the now-banned annual Tiananmen vigil.

Local media reported that two other well-known activists -- Lau Ka-yee and Kwan Chun-pong -- were removed from Victoria Park by police.

Photos published showed that the activists had covered their mouths with red tape while holding a piece of paper.

It read that they were fasting "in mourning for the deceased and victims of 64 (June 4) in respect for Tiananmen Mothers".

AFP reporters also witnessed police detaining a young couple dressed in white and holding white chrysanthemums -- a flower and colour typically used to signify loss and mourning.

When asked if they were being arrested, the flower-wielding man said "I have no idea" as he was taken away.

- Banned vigil -

Chinese troops and tanks broke up peaceful protests in Tiananmen Square on June 4, 1989, brutally crushing a weeks-long wave of demonstrations calling for political change.

For decades, the annual candlelight vigil in Victoria Park drew tens of thousands until its ban in 2020.

Outside the park in Causeway Bay, artists would do interpretive performances about the crackdown and the apparent erasure of memorials happening in the mainland.

The vigil's organiser, Hong Kong Alliance, and its leaders were charged with "incitement to subversion" under the security law, which was imposed to quell the massive and often violent pro-democracy protests that shook the city in 2019.

Former Alliance member Chiu Yan-loy told AFP the police had repeatedly asked him about his June 4 plans.

"They told me multiple times not to leave home on that day," he said.

On Saturday, Victoria Park -- which was blocked with metal barriers for the past three years -- had a "hometown fair" launched by pro-Beijing groups to promote products from the mainland. It will run until Monday.

There was a heavy police presence at Victoria Park and around the Causeway Bay area on Saturday.

Officers stopped and searched people walking around the bustling shopping district, while an armoured vehicle was spotted parked outside a mall.

One performance artist -- who was tailed closely by authorities on Saturday -- took a quieter approach, carrying a foldable chair to sit on and take a selfie, moving from street to street in the area around the park.

"My idea was that I wouldn't stand still unless the police stop me," the artist, who gave his name as Tung, told AFP.

Leading up to the anniversary on Sunday, officials repeatedly refused to confirm if public Tiananmen mourning was illegal, only saying that "everyone should act in accordance with the law".

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said in a statement Saturday that the Tiananmen Square victims' "bravery will not be forgotten", adding that the United States would "continue advocating for people's human rights and fundamental freedoms in China and around the world."

L.Hajek--TPP