A Hong Kong court on Tuesday jailed all 45 defendants convicted of subversion in the city’s largest national security trial, with “mastermind” Benny Tai receiving the longest term of 10 years.
International condemnation was swift, with Western countries and rights groups slamming the sentencing as evidence of the erosion of political freedoms in the city since Beijing imposed a security law in 2020.
Tai’s sentence was the longest yet handed out under the security law, which was brought in to quash dissent after massive, sometimes violent pro-democracy protests in 2019.
His 44 co-defendants were sentenced to shorter terms beginning from four years and two months.
All were charged with subversion after holding an informal poll in 2020 as part of a strategy to win a pro-democracy electoral majority.
The group includes some of the most prominent figures of Hong Kong’s once-diverse political opposition.
After Tai, the second-longest sentence of seven years and nine months was handed to young activist Owen Chow.
In a Facebook post before the sentencing, Chow had said he was “absolutely not optimistic”.
“But I see hope because even (if) I am far from the day of release, we have now seen the end point,” he wrote.
A spokesperson for the US consulate in Hong Kong said the United States “strongly condemns” the sentencing.
China on Tuesday said such Western criticism “seriously desecrates and tramples on the spirit of the rule of law”, and warned against interference.
Taiwan’s presidential office said “democracy is not a crime” and condemned the “use of judicial measures and unfair procedures” to curtail political participation and freedom of speech.