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Seven Hong Kong ‘speedboat fugitives’ jailed over Taiwan escape bid

Hong Kong

Seven Hong Kong ‘speedboat fugitives’ jailed over Taiwan escape bid

  • The seven men were sentenced to ten months in prison for perverting the course of public justice.
  • They were part of a group of 12 Hong Kongers that made a break for Taiwan in August 2020.
  • Two of the original group of 12 are still serving prison sentences in mainland China.

 

Seven people were jailed in Hong Kong on Friday as part of a failed 2020 attempt to flee to Taiwan by speedboat to avoid protest-related prosecutions.

The seven men, aged 19 to 32, were sentenced to ten months in prison for perverting the course of public justice, the first time the charge has been applied to fugitives in Hong Kong.

The defendants were part of a group of 12 Hong Kongers that made a break for Taiwan in August 2020, as they faced serious charges — including rioting, attempted arson and making explosives — related to the huge and sometimes violent democracy protests that convulsed the city the year before.

But they were picked up by the Chinese coast guard and disappeared into the mainland’s opaque judicial system, eventually being convicted behind closed doors for crossing China’s border illegally.

Most of the group were then sent back to Hong Kong after a few months of detention.

Hong Kong judge Newman Wong on Friday said that the escape bid had “disdained and deliberately challenged” the city’s administration of justice.

The group of 12, along with other accomplices, had made an “extensive and organised” plan that spanned nearly six months and involved substantial manpower, resources and finances, Wong said.

Some of the defendants had taken lessons to operate the speedboat and they had chosen clandestine routes on the day of their escape, showing the case to be premeditated and serious, Wong added.

“It is a pity I have to sentence to jail what is supposed to be a group of enterprising young people,” the judge said.

“But lawbreaking must be sanctioned.”

Two of the original group of 12 are still serving prison sentences in mainland China.

Family members of one of them, Tang Kai-yin, said they had not received letters from him since February.

Tang’s prison expenses ledger, which was viewable online, has not been updated since May, his younger brother told media, adding he was worried about how Tang was being treated.

The other Hong Konger still in a mainland prison, Quinn Moon, is expected to be released next month.

Apart from the seven people imprisoned on Friday, Andy Li, another member of the group who was returned to Hong Kong, was charged with foreign collusion under a national security law last year.

Over the past two years, since the Beijing-imposed security law went into effect, more than 180 people have been arrested, the majority of whom are activists, unionists, and journalists, and more than 110 have been prosecuted.

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