Hong Kong arrests eighth person for Tiananmen social media posts
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Police patrolling Victoria Park, where people traditionally gather annually in remembrance of victims of the Tiananmen Square incident, on June 3.
PHOTO: AFP
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HONG KONG - Hong Kong police arrested an eighth person over social media posts about commemorating Beijing’s 1989 Tiananmen Square crackdown on June 3, the eve of the bloody incident’s 35th anniversary.
The arrest was the latest in a series of law enforcement actions taken since May 28 against a group that was accused of publishing “seditious” online posts to “take advantage of an upcoming sensitive day”.
The group was the first nabbed under Hong Kong’s “Safeguarding National Security Ordinance”, the city’s second national security law
The police said on June 3 the eighth person arrested is a 62-year-old man, who was suspected of committing an “offence in connection with seditious intention” – the same offence the first seven were arrested under last week.
It carries a penalty of up to seven years in jail under the new security law.
Among those arrested last week was Chow Hang-tung
Jailed since 2021, Chow is already serving a more than 30-month jail sentence over other charges, including “unauthorised assembly” for her attempt to publicly commemorate the June 4 anniversary.
Hong Kong’s security chief said last week the group made online posts that “were trying to incite disaffection and distrust – and even hatred – against the central government, the Hong Kong government and the judiciary”.
Six of them have been released on bail and subject to a “movement restriction order”, according to the police.
Hong Kong used to be the only place under China’s rule where public commemoration of Beijing’s deadly clampdown on pro-democracy demonstrators in Tiananmen Square on June 4, 1989, was allowed.
The three-decade tradition has been banned since 2020, when Beijing imposed the first national security law
On June 3 evening, dozens of police were seen patrolling Hong Kong’s shopping district of Causeway Bay near Victoria Park, the site of annual commemorations before 2020.
Over the weekend, a Hong Kong Christian weekly newspaper pulled its front-page article about the 35th anniversary, explaining in an editorial that Hong Kong’s society has “become more restrictive”.
A university students’ publication axed its campaign to collect people’s recollections of the crackdown due to “factors we cannot resist”, according to a post on their official social media page on June 1.
And on June 2, an independent bookstore said on its Instagram that several police officers were around the premises for an hour, taking down names of customers, after its staff had put “5.35” – a coded reference to June 4 – on its window. AFP

