Independence activist Edward Leung released from prison






© KEYSTONE/AP/Vincent Yu


Hong Kong independence activist Edward Leung, who coined the slogan for the 2019 Great Democracy Movement, was released from prison on Wednesday. He had been detained there for almost four years.

“The prison services department arranged the release of the prisoner concerned from Shek Pik prison in the early morning” on Wednesday, the department said in an email. Edward Leung, 30, was a rising star on the political scene when the independence movement first gained traction in 2016.

But his rise came to a screeching halt in 2018, when he was jailed for rioting and assaulting police during a 2016 protest in which protesters threw bricks and burned tires in the streets.

Mr. Leung was locked up in a high-security prison. Meanwhile, his campaign slogan, “Free Hong Kong, Revolution of Our Time”, rose to fame when pro-democracy protesters picked it up in 2019 as a rallying cry once morest China’s authoritarian governance.

The slogan, ubiquitous during the huge, sometimes violent, pro-democracy rallies that rocked the city, was banned last year under a national security law that Beijing imposed on Hong Kong to suppress dissent. .

Under surveillance

On Wednesday around 5:45 a.m. (10:45 p.m. Tuesday in Switzerland), Mr. Leung indicated on social networks that he had found his family. “After four years, I want to enjoy this precious time I have with my family and return to a normal life. I would like to express my sincere gratitude for your attention,” he wrote.

He added that he wanted to “stay away from the spotlight and stop using social media”, being legally obliged to do so because he remains under surveillance. His family had called on Tuesday not to come to the prison for his release.

A few weeks ago, government sources told local media that the activist was “probably going to be watched”, the authorities being aware of his influence on the independence camp, which is now very weakened.

Pioneer

Born in 1991 in Wuhan, central China, Mr. Leung was one of the first to raise his voice to demand the independence of Hong Kong, a former British colony returned to China in 1997.

After irritating more than one classic pro-democracy activist, his ideas have become more popular, especially among young people in the semi-autonomous territory, following the failure of the Occupy movement in 2014, when the police evacuated protesters by road. force following 79 days of a sit-in without violence.

The philosophy and political science student then joined the independence movement Hong Kong Indigenous, of which he became the spokesperson. He was the first independence candidate to run for the legislative elections, in 2016. He failed, but collected more than 66,000 votes, seeming to show growing support for a once marginal movement.

Mr. Leung remained silent for most of his detention, except in July 2019 when following violence he wrote a letter asking protesters not to be blinded by hatred. Today, under the national security law that came into force in 2020, calling for Hong Kong independence is punishable by imprisonment, between 10 years and life.

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