Hong Kong: Four Hong Kong Student Leaders Accused of “suggesting terrorism” after their union passed the lines of last month mourning the death of 50 years who stabbed a police officer before killing himself refused on Thursday.
Fourth, aged 18-20 and all of the University of Hong Kong (HKU), is the latest democracy activist who will deny the guarantee under sweeping the national security law that Beijing was imposed on the former England colony last year.
Some supporters of students cried when they left West Kowloon court where Kinson Cheung Raja-Sang, 19, Kwok Wing-ho, 20, Chris Shing-Hang Todorovski, 18, and Yung Chung-hei, 19, was denied guarantees.
Judge Peter Legal was originally given a guarantee for Yung but the decision immediately appealed by the prosecutor.
This case was postponed for September 14 “I did not expect students to be worn by encouraging terrorism.
They only issued a statement,” Jeff said, 18, a student at HKU outside the court.
An officer stabbed from behind on July 1, while on duty with other police prevented the demonstration on the warning of the city’s return to the Chinese government in 1997.
The man then stabbed himself in the chest and died at the hospital.
Police, 28, suffered lungs were pierced, but survived what security secretary Chris Tang was described as a terrorist action by “wolf”.
Shortly after the attack, dozens of members of some students graduated from motion, because they were withdrawn, to commemorate the age of 50 years and appreciate his “sacrifice”.
The union leader then apologized, withdrawn motion and resigned from their position.
The Union Campus Office since it was raided by the National Security Police and the University had disconnected the relationship with the union and banned around 30 students who signed up the building.
During the anti-government protest that rocked the city in 2019, the authorities were explained by the student campus, where some fierce battles erupted, as fertile land of violence.