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Police officers stand guard at a downtown street in Hong Kong on Sept. 6, as about 30 people were arrested at protests against the government’s decision to postpone elections for Hong Kong’s legislature. (AP Photo/Vincent Yu)

Lawyers Pressured as China Labels Hong Kong Fugitives ‘Separatists’

HONG KONG (AFP) — Concerns were growing Monday for the fate of a group of Hong Kongers in mainland custody after a senior Chinese official declared them “separatists” and lawyers were pressured to drop them as clients.

Authorities said they intercepted the 12 Hong Kongers trying to flee by boat to Taiwan last month, with the group handed over to police in neighboring Shenzhen on the Chinese mainland.

Those on board were facing prosecution in Hong Kong for alleged crimes linked to last year’s huge pro-democracy protests.

China says the group, aged between 16 and 33, are being held for illegally crossing its border — but there are fears they will face national security charges, which can carry a life prison sentence or execution.

Mainland lawyers appointed by the families were warned off the group, according to sources and individuals familiar with the case.

On Sunday Hua Chunying, a spokeswoman of China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, raised the prospect Beijing was treating the group as national security threats.

“They are not democratic activists, but elements attempting to separate Hong Kong from China,” Hua tweeted after her counterpart at the US State Department voiced concerns about the group’s disappearance into China’s opaque justice system.

Authorities only confirmed the group were in criminal detention late Sunday, more than 20 days after their initial arrest.

Conviction in the party controled courts is all but guaranteed for those charged, especially with national security offences. 

Two sources with direct knowledge of the cases said Monday mainland lawyers appointed by families to represent their loved ones were now being warned to abandon their clients in favor of “government appointed” lawyers.

One person, who was involved in the campaign to get the detained legal representation and requested anonymity to speak freely, said China’s Ministry of Justice had ordered “all levels to do well in managing and controlling the lawyers.”

Fleeing charges

Rights groups and legal analysts have previously documented how Chinese authorities use “government appointed lawyers” to stop families hiring their own legal representatives in high profile cases.

One lawyer assisting one of the 12 detainees said cutting off family-hired professionals would help mainland authorities retain more control over the case.

“Eventually the defendants will be besieged and hunted by government-assigned lawyers, the police, the prosecutors and the court,” the lawyer said, requesting anonymity to speak openly.

On Saturday, family members of those detained gave an emotional press conference saying they had no idea where their relatives were being held and that lawyers had been repeatedly denied access.

James To, a veteran democratic Hong Kong lawmaker assisting the families, rejected Hua’s comments that the group were separatists and had shown no intent to enter China.

“Whatever they did was done in Hong Kong and should be tried in Hong Kong,” he told AFP. 

The territory’s pro-Beijing government has said it will only consider requesting the return of its residents once they have completed any legal procedures or jail terms in the mainland — even though most are wanted for serious crimes in the financial hub.

Neither Hong Kong nor Beijing have named the 12 detained people.

But on Monday, Hong Kong security chief John Lee confirmed the charges they face in the city.

Ten are charged with “manufacturing or possessing explosives, arson, conspiring to harm, rioting, assaulting police officers and possessing offensive weapons,” he wrote in his official blog.

Another is suspected of possessing or manufacturing explosives, while the last person is wanted for “colluding with foreign forces” — an offence under the new security law.


by Su Xinqi
© Agence France-Presse