Eight activists jailed in Shenzhen returned to Hong Kong
HONG KONG — Eight activists detained at sea as they sought to flee Hong Kong by speedboat have finished serving jail sentences in China and were handed over Monday to authorities in Hong Kong, where they may face further prosecution.
The group of eight activists aged 19 to 31 had been jailed in the southern city of Shenzhen, and returned to Hong Kong in batches, according to a police statement Monday. Pro-democracy activist Andy Li was the first of the group to be returned to the city after serving a seven-month prison sentence, according to local newspaper South China Morning Post, which cited an anonymous police source.
The eight men are part of a larger group of 12 Hong Kong pro-democracy activists and protesters who were detained at sea in August last year during an ill-fated attempt to reach self-ruled Taiwan. Many of the them were facing prosecution in Hong Kong due to their involvement in anti-government protests that began in mid-2019, and one had been arrested on suspicion of collusion with a foreign country to endanger national security.
They were convicted by a Shenzhen court of illegally crossing the maritime border and sentenced to seven-month jail terms. While Hong Kong is part of China, travellers must still pass through immigration when going to and from the mainland, which surrounds Hong Kong by land and sea.