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Wanted Hong Kong activist's relatives taken for questioning by police

This is the first time that relatives of an activist have been questioned after the issuance of the warrants and a bounty of US$128,000 for information leading to any arrests.

Reuters
2 minute read
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Pro-democracy activist Nathan Law is interviewed by journalists outside the Final Court of Appeal after being granted bail in Hong Kong, China Oct 24, 2017. Photo: Reuters
Pro-democracy activist Nathan Law is interviewed by journalists outside the Final Court of Appeal after being granted bail in Hong Kong, China Oct 24, 2017. Photo: Reuters

Hong Kong national security police on Tuesday took away exiled activist Nathan Law's parents and brother for questioning, local media reported, one week after the police issued an arrest warrant and a bounty on Law's head.

Local media, citing unnamed sources, said Law's relatives were taken away from their homes in Hong Kong for questioning, then released.

The Hong Kong police gave no immediate response to a Reuters request for comment. Law declined to comment when contacted by Reuters.

Law is among eight overseas-based activists who were issued with arrest warrants last week by the Hong Kong police for alleged offences under a national security law that China imposed in Hong Kong in 2020.

This was the first time that relatives of an activist have been questioned after the issuance of the warrants and a bounty of US$128,000 (about RM596,000) for information leading to any arrests.

Hong Kong's pro-Beijing leader John Lee said recently that the eight activists should be treated like "street rats" that people should avoid or report on.

Law publicly severed ties with his family in Hong Kong in August 2020, and was granted political asylum in Britain two years ago.

Last week, police arrested five former members of the disbanded political group Demosisto, for running an online commercial platform that was allegedly used to provide financial aid to Law, according to local media and sources.

They were later granted bail, according to a source with direct knowledge of the matter.

Demosisto was founded by Law and other activists, but disbanded after the enactment of the national security law.

The security legislation has been criticised as a tool of repression by governments including the US, but Beijing says it has restored stability to Hong Kong after protracted pro-democracy demonstrations in 2019.

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