Tiananmen: Hong Kong vigil organiser arrested on 32nd anniversary
- Published
Pro-democracy activist Chow Hang Tung has been arrested by Hong Kong police on the 32nd anniversary of the 1989 Tiananmen Square crackdown.
Ms Chow is vice chairwoman of the Hong Kong Alliance which organises annual vigils for victims of Beijing's deadly crackdown on democracy protesters.
She has been arrested for promoting unauthorised assembly.
It comes as Hong Kong has banned the vigil for the second year running, citing coronavirus restrictions.
Hong Kong and Macau are the only places in Chinese territory where people can commemorate the deadly 1989 crackdown on pro-democracy protesters.
But this year, authorities in Macau also banned the vigil for the second year in a row, saying it would violate local criminal laws.
Defiant in the face of arrest
Ms Chow was arrested early in the morning outside her office by officers in plain clothes, according to reports.
She was placed in a black saloon car and driven away, the AFP news agency said.
Speaking to the BBC ahead of her arrest, Ms Chow, who is also a lawyer and a human rights activist, said she was prepared for the inevitable.
"I am prepared to be arrested. This is how Hong Kong is now. If you fight for democracy under an authoritarian regime, being arrested is unavoidable. Let it come. I am willing to pay the price for fighting for democracy," she said.
Huge crowds usually gather in Hong Kong's Victoria Park each year to mark the anniversary of Chinese troops crushing peaceful democracy protests in Beijing's Tiananmen Square on 4 June 1989.
Troops and tanks opened fire on pro-democracy protesters in Beijing - estimates of the dead vary from a few hundred to several thousand.
But last year, Hong Kong banned the vigil for the first time in 30 years - citing virus concerns.
Despite this, tens of thousands of people defied the ban, knocking down barricades that had been erected around Victoria Park.
However, this year's Tiananmen anniversary is the first since a new controversial security law was approved, aimed at ending the city's pro-democracy movement and criminalising dissent.
Around 100 people have been arrested since the law was enacted in June.
"This will be the first June 4 since the National Security Law. Many ask if the vigil will disappear. I think we have been persisting for more than 30 years. It is more or less in Hong Kong people's DNA," Ms Chow told the BBC before her arrest.
'Are you going to arrest me?'
Lam Cho Wai, BBC Chinese
Chow Hang Tung was as defiant as ever when I interviewed her last month.
She asked: "I will light up a candle in the street. Are you going to arrest me for that?"
She was arrested, before she even got the chance to do that. But it comes as no surprise. Around 7,000 police officers are patrolling the streets of Hong Kong today.
They might make more arrests over the course of the day, according to local media reports - a stark warning to those who might try to defy the vigil ban.
Ms Chow is considered the successor of the Hong Kong Alliance which has been fighting for democracy for more than 30 years.
The 37-year-old barrister became a key figure after her colleagues were jailed for participating in unauthorised assembly.
Ms Chow had told her followers that she would go to Victoria Park, the site of the annual demonstrations, to keep the tradition going.
The arrest is not her first. She was among the pro-democracy activists who were last year arrested for inciting and participating unauthorised assembly.
Activists had called on residents to light candles in their own homes and neighbourhoods as their own way of commemorating the victims.
In mainland China, authorities have banned even oblique references to the events of June 4. Online, any discussion of the crackdown is strictly censored.