Hong Kong’s High Court on Tuesday jailed 45 pro-democracy activists for up to 10 years following a landmark national security trial that has damaged the city’s once feisty democracy movement and drawn criticism from the U.S. and other countries.
A total of 47 pro-democracy activists were arrested and charged in 2021 with conspiracy to commit subversion under a Beijing-imposed national security law and had faced sentences of up to life in prison.
Benny Tai, a former legal scholar identified as an “organiser” of the activists, was sentenced to 10 years in jail, the longest sentence so far under the 2020 national security law.
Some Western governments have criticised the trial, with the U.S. describing it as “politically motivated”, opens new tab and saying the democrats should be released as they had been legally and peacefully participating in political activities.
CLOSELY WATCHED TRIAL
Australia’s Foreign Minister Penny Wong said she was “gravely concerned” about the sentence, and called on China to “cease suppression of freedoms of expression, assembly, media and civil society,” in Hong Kong.
Sentences ranged from just over four years to 10 years.