Hong Kong clears young activists to appeal prison sentences
Hong Kong’s top court on Tuesday gave three young democracy activists, including Joshua Wong, a last chance to appeal prison sentences related to their involvement in huge 2014 pro-democracy protests in the Chinese-controlled city.
The Court of Final Appeal approved the request by Wong, Nathan Law and Alex Chow to appeal the months-long prison terms they received for their roles in an unlawful assembly that sparked the protests.
“It’s really good news for us,” Wong told reporters after the hearing, though he noted the “three of us still have the possibility to be put inside prison again a few months later.”
The three were originally given community service or suspended sentences that let them avoid jail but those were overturned after the justice secretary requested a sentencing review. The move raised concerns that the city’s independent judiciary was being undermined — part of broader tensions over Beijing’s increasingly strained relationship with Hong Kong, which includes calls for independence on college campuses and football fans booing China’s national anthem.