Nine Arrested on Suspicion of Helping 12 Flee Hong Kong for Taiwan

Reuters
By Reuters
October 10, 2020Asia & Pacific
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Nine Arrested on Suspicion of Helping 12 Flee Hong Kong for Taiwan
Pro-democracy activist Joshua Wong speaks to members of media outside the Government Flying Service on October 8, 2020 in Hong Kong, China. (Anthony Kwan/Getty Images)

HONG KONG—Hong Kong police said on Saturday they had arrested nine people suspected of helping 12 Hong Kong activists who fled the city in August, heading for Taiwan, only to be intercepted by Chinese authorities and held on the mainland.

The detainees’ plight has grabbed international attention, with human rights groups raising concern as their families said they were denied access to independent lawyers, and aired suspicion that Hong Kong authorities helped in China’s arrests.

Accused of crimes tied to anti-government protests in Hong Kong last year, the group is being detained in China’s southern city of Shenzhen after authorities intercepted their boat and accused them of illegal border crossing.

Police arrested four men and five women suspected of arranging transport for the fugitives, said Hong Kong police official Ho Chun-tung.

“One direction of the investigation is whether they helped others to flee,” said Ho, a superintendent with the force’s organised crime and triad bureau, adding that he did not rule out the possibility of more arrests.

He dismissed the relatives’ accusations that police in the Asian financial hub played a role in the arrests in China.

“The arrests on the mainland had nothing to do with the Hong Kong police,” Ho added.

Police also seized HK$500,000 ($64,500) in cash, computers, mobile phones, and documents related to the purchase of a boat.

People began fleeing Hong Kong for self-ruled Taiwan from the early months of the protests, most of them legally, by air, but some by fishing boat, activists in Taipei who helped Hong Kong citizens get visas have told Reuters.

Hong Kong authorities have said those detained are to be represented by mainland lawyers of their choice, albeit from a list provided by Chinese authorities.

Their families have been offered “needed and feasible” assistance, which will continue, the authorities have said.

By Jessie Pang

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