Hong Kong: Court convicts 7 men over Yuen Long attack
July 22, 2021Seven men have been sentenced in Hong Kong for taking part in a mob attack on protesters who were returning from a pro-democracy rally two years ago, with the judge handing them jail terms varying between three and half and seven years.
The men were found guilty of rioting as well as wounding with intent or conspiracy to wound with intent.
Judge Eddie Yip said the attacks were "indiscriminate" in nature, and that attackers had "collectively lost their minds."
"They collectively took the law into their own hands and put residents in extreme terror," Yip added.
What happened in 2019?
Dubbed the 'Yuen Long' mob attacks, more than a hundred men dressed in white and wielding sticks had pounced on pro-democracy supporters at a train station in Yuen Long, a town close to the rural border with mainland China.
The attackers injured at least 45 people, including ordinary commuters and reporters.
The attacks marked a turning point in anti-government protests as police personnel were accused of colluding with attackers and slammed for their perceived inability to de-escalate the situation. Police have denied any wrongdoing, saying that their resources were stretched thin due to anti-government protests elsewhere.
An award-winning journalist was found guilty of illegally obtaining vehicle registration of potential assaulters in April. Bao Choy was conducting an investigation into police action on the day of the beatings for public broadcaster Radio Television Hong Kong.
rm/dj (Reuters, AFP)