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Hong Kong police warn residents against mourning man who stabbed officer

Agence France-Presse
Hong Kong police warn residents against mourning man who stabbed officer
This picture taken in Hong Kong on July 2, 2021, shows police checking the belongings of a woman (C) holding flowers within a cordoned zone in the shopping district of Causeway Bay, near the site where a man stabbed a police officer in the back the night before, before stabbing himself in the chest and later dying of his wounds. A 50-year-old man who died after stabbing a Hong Kong police officer was a "lone wolf" attacker who had been politically "radicalised", the city's security chief said on July 2.
ANTHONY WALLACE / AFP

HONG KONG — Hong Kong authorities on Sunday warned residents against mourning a man who killed himself after stabbing a policeman, saying that encouraging such memorials was the same as "supporting terrorism".

Police had described the attacker, who stabbed an officer before fatally wounding himself on Thursday, as politically "radicalised".

Hong Kong has become a deeply polarised city, especially since the huge, often violent pro-democracy protests of 2019. Many residents chafe under Beijing's increasingly authoritarian rule.

Some tried to pay tribute to the attacker by laying flowers and observing a moment of silence on Friday, prompting the latest warning from police.

"Advocating members of the public to mourn for the attacker is no different from supporting terrorism," the force said in a statement.

Hong Kong and Chinese authorities have clamped down on dissent using a new national security law, under which a terrorism conviction could carry a life sentence, while promoting, inciting and supporting terrorism could result in up to ten years in prison.

In their Sunday statement, the police said they were investigating if the man who stabbed an officer was "incited" to carry out the attack.

It warned that "any act with a seditious intention" can be prosecuted, carrying a maximum sentence of two years in jail.

Images published by local media from the scene showed some white flowers left by mourners were dumped in trash bins or seized and placed into police vehicles.

China says its crackdown and national security law are needed to restore stability in Hong Kong. But critics, including many western nations, say Beijing has shredded its promise to let the city maintain certain freedoms and autonomy after its 1997 handover.

The political situation has left many companies walking a tightrope as they try not to offend the authorities.

Vitasoy, a Hong Kong beverage conglomerate, had confirmed that the man who attacked the officer last week was its employee, and expressed regret at the tragedy.

But it had to swiftly apologise and condemn the attack after nationalist backlash on social media in mainland China.

vuukle comment

CHINA

DEMOCRACY

HONG KONG

HUMAN RIGHTS

NATIONAL SECURITY LAW

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