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

EUR -
AED 4.292558
AFN 79.635726
ALL 97.056979
AMD 447.372947
ANG 2.091968
AOA 1071.825075
ARS 1664.391269
AUD 1.77011
AWG 2.10391
AZN 1.985577
BAM 1.955941
BBD 2.353269
BDT 142.190224
BGN 1.956625
BHD 0.440684
BIF 3486.750716
BMD 1.168839
BND 1.501608
BOB 8.073581
BRL 6.332187
BSD 1.168384
BTN 103.308103
BWP 15.656858
BYN 3.955184
BYR 22909.245299
BZD 2.349869
CAD 1.62257
CDF 3361.580874
CHF 0.934487
CLF 0.028708
CLP 1126.047447
CNY 8.323595
CNH 8.327207
COP 4586.185453
CRC 588.93479
CUC 1.168839
CUP 30.974235
CVE 110.272929
CZK 24.388412
DJF 208.064961
DKK 7.46413
DOP 74.465354
DZD 151.88365
EGP 56.377642
ERN 17.532586
ETB 167.761863
FJD 2.626089
FKP 0.862839
GBP 0.864801
GEL 3.143933
GGP 0.862839
GHS 14.254025
GIP 0.862839
GMD 84.15638
GNF 10133.72867
GTQ 8.950644
GYD 244.447577
HKD 9.105758
HNL 30.606201
HRK 7.536321
HTG 153.001002
HUF 392.784884
IDR 19267.493484
ILS 3.904466
IMP 0.862839
INR 103.361634
IQD 1530.610059
IRR 49196.435056
ISK 142.808983
JEP 0.862839
JMD 187.073452
JOD 0.828768
JPY 172.895252
KES 151.188705
KGS 102.21484
KHR 4683.336757
KMF 491.499784
KPW 1051.943986
KRW 1628.017507
KWD 0.357151
KYD 0.973653
KZT 629.905294
LAK 25334.821711
LBP 104629.923458
LKR 352.625356
LRD 214.405417
LSL 20.505974
LTL 3.451278
LVL 0.707019
LYD 6.322455
MAD 10.550059
MDL 19.413064
MGA 5200.373935
MKD 61.544425
MMK 2454.077343
MNT 4203.904032
MOP 9.374333
MRU 46.431339
MUR 53.252296
MVR 18.01184
MWK 2026.045684
MXN 21.779972
MYR 4.934789
MZN 74.700734
NAD 20.505974
NGN 1759.816007
NIO 42.993091
NOK 11.611697
NPR 165.294886
NZD 1.971539
OMR 0.449408
PAB 1.168384
PEN 4.065692
PGK 4.952356
PHP 66.823701
PKR 331.655248
PLN 4.265643
PYG 8369.60182
QAR 4.258797
RON 5.071359
RSD 117.197449
RUB 99.118795
RWF 1693.021737
SAR 4.385065
SBD 9.612326
SCR 16.612824
SDG 701.903664
SEK 10.949706
SGD 1.501725
SHP 0.918524
SLE 27.321646
SLL 24509.968
SOS 667.748015
SRD 46.021914
STD 24192.608373
STN 24.501762
SVC 10.223735
SYP 15197.074173
SZL 20.496474
THB 37.196548
TJS 11.082197
TMT 4.102625
TND 3.409945
TOP 2.737539
TRY 48.266706
TTD 7.935469
TWD 35.467836
TZS 2881.188287
UAH 48.292272
UGX 4101.294905
USD 1.168839
UYU 46.763363
UZS 14442.038461
VES 182.547301
VND 30860.272908
VUV 139.200961
WST 3.174457
XAF 656.00417
XAG 0.028475
XAU 0.000323
XCD 3.158846
XCG 2.105751
XDR 0.815454
XOF 656.00417
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.05087
ZAR 20.504007
ZMK 10520.949275
ZMW 27.837002
ZWL 376.365696
  • CMSC

    0.0700

    24.37

    +0.29%

  • GSK

    0.8800

    41.38

    +2.13%

  • RYCEF

    0.4100

    15.28

    +2.68%

  • JRI

    0.1050

    14.125

    +0.74%

  • NGG

    0.1010

    70.781

    +0.14%

  • BCC

    2.3000

    88.17

    +2.61%

  • SCS

    0.2050

    16.925

    +1.21%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    77.27

    0%

  • RIO

    0.4700

    62.57

    +0.75%

  • AZN

    0.0100

    80.82

    +0.01%

  • CMSD

    0.0850

    24.425

    +0.35%

  • RELX

    0.9690

    46.099

    +2.1%

  • BTI

    1.0600

    57.32

    +1.85%

  • BCE

    0.1350

    24.275

    +0.56%

  • VOD

    0.1650

    11.815

    +1.4%

  • BP

    -0.2200

    34.54

    -0.64%

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