Hong Kong Police Arrests at Least 3 on Anniversary of 2019 Anti-Extradition Protest

Hong Kong Police Arrests at Least 3 on Anniversary of 2019 Anti-Extradition Protest
A pedestrian walks past a government-sponsored advertisement promoting a new national security law in Hong Kong on June 30, 2020. (Billy H.C. Kwok/Getty Images)
Reuters
6/13/2021
Updated:
6/13/2021

HONG KONG—Hong Kong police arrested at least three protesters on the anniversary of mass protests against an extradition bill involving China in 2019 that rocked the financial hub and eventually led to Beijing introducing its “national security law” that has stifled dissent in the city by making anti-government speech and organizing illegal.

The protesters were arrested for disorderly conduct and failing to produce proof of identity, while at least 10 people were summoned for violating a ban on gatherings, police said, after protests in the Kowloon district of Mongkok and the chanting of slogans in breach of a National Security Law imposed last June.

Some people blocked roads by placing rubbish bins and other objects in them, police said.

“The police strongly condemn protectors’ acts endangering public health and safety,” police said in a post on Facebook shortly before midnight on Saturday.

The three people arrested were male aged 15 to 19, police said.

Small groups gathered on Saturday to commemorate the first major clashes between protesters and police two years ago when tens of thousands demonstrated against a proposed law for the former British colony that would have allowed criminal suspects to be extradited to the mainland for trial.

Many Hong Kong residents saw the proposed law as further erosion of the city’s special status that was supposed to be guaranteed under a “one country, two systems” formula agreed when Britain handed it over to China’s ruling communist party in 1997.

The 2019 protests snowballed over subsequent months into a mass movement for freedom from the Chinese regime and liberal democracy, as opposed to China’s socialist democracy, that included regular clashes between protesters and police firing tear gas and rubber bullets.

Protesters occupy Harcourt Road the government headquarters in Admiralty, Hong Kong, on June 12, 2019. (Lin Yi/The Epoch Times)
Protesters occupy Harcourt Road the government headquarters in Admiralty, Hong Kong, on June 12, 2019. (Lin Yi/The Epoch Times)
Police fired tear gas toward the protesters over 10 times near the Legislative Council of Hong Kong on June 12, 2019. (Song Bilong/The Epoch Times)
Police fired tear gas toward the protesters over 10 times near the Legislative Council of Hong Kong on June 12, 2019. (Song Bilong/The Epoch Times)

Police deployed 2,000 officers around the city on Saturday, the South China Morning Post reported.

Police said on the eve of the anniversary that they had arrested two people on suspicion of promoting and inciting others to join an unlawful assembly. Activist group Student Politicism said two of its leaders were arrested.

There was no sign of any protests on Sunday.