Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
9 Hong Kong activists sentenced to 10 months over participation in Tiananmen Square Massacre vigil
9 Hong Kong activists sentenced to 10 months over participation in Tiananmen Square Massacre vigil
Jan 4, 2026 10:33 PM

The sentences are the latest in the Chinese Communist Party’s, or CCP’s, relentless pursuit of absolute control, which simultaneously smothers any hint of dissent, including freedoms of speech and assembly.

Read More…

Nine Hong Kong pro-democracy activists were sentenced Sept. 15 to 10 months in prison for their participation in the annual vigil for memoration of the Tiananmen Square Massacre.

Twelve defendants total pled guilty earlier this month to their involvement in the vigil memorates the 1989 Tiananmen Square Massacre, when Chinese troops fired at student protesters participating in pro-democracy protests.

The sentences are the latest in the Chinese Communist Party’s, or CCP’s, relentless pursuit of absolute control, which simultaneously smothers any hint of dissent, including freedoms of speech and assembly.

Nine activists were charged with taking part in unauthorized assembly, while seven of them face additional charges of inciting others to participate in the event. Both actions violate Hong Kong’s National Security Law, or NSL.

Last year’s vigil was banned, with police citing its violation of COVID policy. Still, thousands of people fled to the gated Victoria Park, against police warning, lighting candles, singing songs, and remembering those who were killed by Chinese troops.

After last year’s vigil, 20 activists were arrested. Several of the arrested activists faced charges under the NSL, including the leader of the Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Democratic Movements in China, Lee Cheuk-yan. Another notable person charged after the vigil is longtime Acton friend and Hong Kong media mogul Jimmy Lai, as well as Figo Chan, the former leader of the now-disbanded Civil Rights Human Front. Both Lai and Cheuk-yan have pled guilty to the unauthorized assembly charges and are set to stand trial in November.

Other prominent pro-democracy activists like Joshua Wong previously pled guilty over their participation in last year’s vigil and were handed sentences between four and 10 months.

Just last week, in another attempt to censor any memory of the massacre, several members of the Alliance that organized and participated in the vigil were arrested, after they refused to provide information for a police investigation.

The NSL bans what the CCP deems as subversion, secession, or terrorism. Since its passage in June 2020, over 100 activists have been arrested.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Rev. Robert A. Sirico on Accountability in Leadership
In the wake of the Christmas Day bombing attempt on a Northwest Airlines flight from Amsterdam to Detroit and the ensuing controversy over the Obama Administration’s handling both of the pre-attack intelligence and the post-attack response, Neil Cavuto invited Acton President Rev. Robert A. Sirico on his show to discuss how President Obama might go about exercising proper leadership and accountability in his address to the nation last night. The clip from Your World with Neil Cavuto follows: ...
Promises and perils of globalization
Thomas P.M. Barnett has written a good, concise, piece on the consolidation and deepening of globalization, specifically Wal-Mart’s tapping into local producers in developing countries. (HT: Real Clear World) As far as I can tell, there are no Wal-Mart’s in Italy, but having spent the last three weeks at my parents’ home in Flint, Michigan and shopping at places like Wal-Mart and Target, I can clearly see how far behind the curve Italy is. While family-run boutiques and the slow-food...
Acton University: Register Today!
A friendly reminder that registration is currently open for the 2010 Acton University (AU), which will take place on June 15-18 in Grand Rapids, Mich. This year’s distinguished international faculty will once again guide participants through an expanded curriculum, offering even greater depth of exploration into the intellectual foundations of a free society. For four days each June in Grand Rapids, the Acton Institute convenes an ecumenical conference of 400 pastors, seminarians, educators, non-profit managers, business people and philanthropists from...
‘A Broadened Perspective on the Ethics of Early Modern Exchange’
Camarin M. Porter of the Department of History at University of Wisconsin-Madison reviews a text edited by Stephen J. Grabill, Sourcebook in Late-Scholastic Monetary Theory: The Contributions of Martin de Azpilcueta, Luis de Molina, and Juan de Mariana (Lexington, 2007). The review appears courtesy of H-Net, a unique and indispensable set of list-servs hosted by Michigan State University. The Sourcebook includes translations into English of selected texts from the significant figures listed in the book’s subtitle, as well as a...
Secularism and Brit Hume
The Big Hollywood blogger and actor Adam Baldwin, recently of the television series Chuck and Firefly, has taken up his virtual pen to defend Brit Hume from those who have criticized him for suggesting that Tiger Woods should consider Christianity in his time of crisis. Hume made the statement on Fox News Sunday, thus prompting outrage from secularists who find such an offering offensive and irrelevant. Baldwin scores several times in his blog piece. Here is the foundation: As an...
How to Help Haiti
I have to admit that my first few reactions to the news of an earthquake in the Caribbean weren’t especially charitable. I thought first that the scale of the reports had to be exaggerated, that things couldn’t be as bad as the media was breathlessly reporting. Then I wondered how long it would take for the environmental movement to make use of the disaster to advance their agenda. Neither of these reactions are particularly noble on my part, obviously. Blame...
Wikipedia: Freedom in Community
In this week’s Acton Commentary, I reflect on a decade of Wikipedia, a remarkable experiment in human interaction: Ten years ago this month, Internet entrepreneur Jimmy Wales hired Larry Sanger to develop an online encyclopedia. You may have never heard of that project, titled “Nupedia,” but you’ve probably heard of the site that emerged from its ashes. Wikipedia is not only one of the most successful initiatives in the history of the Web but also a shining example of the...
Recommended: Belloc’s Puzzling Manifesto
Hilaire BellocOver the past five years, many conservatives and religiously-inclined people have been turning to the works of Hilaire Belloc and G.K. Chesterton as part of an effort to rethink the nature of economic life. Both these figures wrote about many other things than economics – and some would say that, for all their insights as Christian apologists, economics was never their strong point. Indeed many of their economic writings were heavily criticized when they were initially published in Britain...
Getting the Lead Out
In this week’s Acton Commentary, “From the Lead Frying Pan into the Toxic Fire,” I examine some of the fallout from the lead paint fiasco of 2007. Last month RC2 Corp. settled the civil penalty for violating a federal lead paint ban. But in the wake of subsequent federal action, I examine two unintended consequences. First, new federal regulations are posing an unsustainable burden on some small businesses, forcing them to make very hard choices about whether to keep their...
Not so separate after all
The New York Times is not known to be the most reliable or mentator on matters religious, but a recent Times article (marred, unfortunately, by a couple of inaccuracies) highlighted that France’s claim to have separated religion from the state is only true in parts. French cities and the countryside are dotted with beautiful churches, but few realize that the state is responsible for the physical upkeep of many of them. This is a legacy of the famous (or, infamous,...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved