Native name | 香港民主派初選案 |
---|---|
Date | 6 January 2021 | – Present
Location | Hong Kong |
Target | Participants of 2020 pro-democracy primaries |
Arrests | 55 |
Suspects | 47 |
Charges | Conspiracy to commit subversion under the Hong Kong national security law |
Trial | HCCC69/2022 |
The Hong Kong 47 are a group of 47 pro-democracy advocates in Hong Kong charged with conspiracy to commit subversion under the Hong Kong national security law.[1]
On 6 January 2021, 55 activists, former legislators, social workers and academics were arrested by the National Security Department of the Hong Kong Police Force under the national security law over their organisation and participation in the primaries for the subsequently postponed Legislative Council election, including six organisers and 48 participants, of which two were arrested in jail, making it the largest crackdown under the national security law since its passage on 30 June 2020. Authorities also raided 72 sites including the home of jailed activist Joshua Wong, the offices of news outlets Apple Daily, Stand News and InMedia HK and polling institute Hong Kong Public Opinion Research Institute (PORI), and froze more than $200,000 in funds related to the primaries.[2] The arrests reduced the pro-democracy camp, including its moderate wing, considerably, and targeted several prominent figures.[3]
On 28 February, 47 opposition figures among those arrested in January were officially charged with conspiracy to commit subversion under the national security law. Their appearance in court on 1 March saw hundreds of protesters assembling outside the building, a rare act of defiance before the background of restrictions due to the national security law and the COVID-19 pandemic.[4]
Several defence lawyers expressed their objections in court to the slow prosecutions, which contrasted with speedily pressed charges.[4] Analysts considered the slow charges, which extended to other national security cases, to be a deliberate strategy designed to stoke fear.[5] The case was adjourned several times; at the adjournment on 4 March 2022, the next hearing date was set as 28 April, due to the COVID-19 pandemic,[6] at which date the defendants were told to appear again on 1 to 2 June; a higher court judge had called on the handling lower court a few days earlier to deliver a speedy trial.[7] The defendants were subjected at times to solitary confinement.[1]
As of 8 March 2022, only 13 of 47 defendants had been granted bail, a reflection of the stringent requirements for bail under the national security law.[8] By early July 2021, many of the defendants had announced their retirement from politics.[9] The trial lasted from 6 February to 4 December 2023.[10][11]