Chief Superintendent of Police (National Security) Li Kwai-wah announces the warrants.
Tue 04 July 2023:
Australia, the United Kingdom and the United States have condemned the Hong Kong police over arrest warrants and bounties for eight exiled pro-democracy activists.
Hong Kong police on Monday evening announced a payment of 1 million Hong Kong dollars ($127,600) for information leading to the capture of the eight who are living overseas.
“The extraterritorial application of the Beijing-imposed National Security Law is a dangerous precedent that threatens the human rights and fundamental freedoms of people all over the world,” US State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller said in a statement.
Hong Kong accuses the eight, including three former legislators, of “collusion with foreign forces” under the National Security Law, which Beijing imposed on the territory in 2020.
The eight “committed serious crimes endangering national security, advocated sanctions, undermined Hong Kong and intimidated Hong Kong officials” as well as “schemed for foreign countries to undermine Hong Kong’s financial status,” the police alleged.
Among the eight living in the UK is Nathan Law, the youngest person ever elected to Hong Kong’s legislature, who told the BBC that he had to be “more careful” as a result of the warrants.
Beijing critics have already expressed alarm at the existence of suspected Chinese police stations operating in democratic countries in Europe and North America. China has said they are “service centres” for Chinese citizens needing help with administrative tasks such as the renewal of passports.
UK Foreign Minister James Cleverly said the arrest warrants were a “further example of the authoritarian reach of China’s extraterritorial law“.
‘Pursued for life’
The broadly-worded NSL criminalises activities deemed to be secession, subversion and collusion with foreign forces, and was introduced after mass protests in support of democracy swept the territory in 2019, some of which turned violent.
Among its most high-profile targets is media tycoon Jimmy Lai who was arrested shortly after the law was introduced and sentenced to five years in prison in December 2022 for fraud over an office lease. He faces a trial on security law charges in September, after it was delayed because of the presence of a UK-based lawyer on his defence team.