Skip to main contentSkip to navigationSkip to navigation
Former committee member Richard Tsoi Yiu-Cheong announces the disbanding of the Hong Kong Alliance on Saturday.
Former committee member Richard Tsoi Yiu-Cheong announces the disbanding of the Hong Kong Alliance on Saturday. Photograph: Alex Chan Tsz Yuk/SOPA Images/REX/Shutterstock
Former committee member Richard Tsoi Yiu-Cheong announces the disbanding of the Hong Kong Alliance on Saturday. Photograph: Alex Chan Tsz Yuk/SOPA Images/REX/Shutterstock

Hong Kong Tiananmen vigil group disbands amid crackdown on dissent

This article is more than 2 years old

Prominent pro-democracy group Hong Kong Alliance voted to disband after many of its leaders were arrested

The Hong Kong pro-democracy group that organised three decades of vigils commemorating the victims of Beijing’s Tiananmen Square massacre has voted to disband in the face of China’s sweeping clampdown on dissent.

The Hong Kong Alliance was one of the most prominent symbols of the city’s former political plurality, and its dissolution on Saturday is the latest illustration of how quickly China is remoulding the business hub in its own authoritarian image.

After announcing the decision to disband, a representative of the alliance read out a letter from their chairman Lee Cheuk-yan, who is in jail.

“A regime cannot take away the people’s memory and conscience,” the letter read. “The beliefs of the Hong Kong Alliance will be passed on in the hearts of Hongkongers.”

Many of the alliance’s leaders are in custody for taking part in the city’s democracy movement.

Earlier this month, police charged three senior figures, including Lee, with subversion – a national security crime.

That same week, officers raided a shuttered museum the group ran commemorating Beijing’s deadly 1989 Tiananmen Square crackdown, hauling away exhibits, memorabilia and photographs of the historic event.

Police also ordered the group to take down its website and social media platforms and authorities vowed to revoke its registration as a company.

The alliance’s leadership was split on whether to disband.

“I still hope to show Hong Kong Alliance’s beliefs to the world and continue this movement that has already lasted for 32 years,” Chow Hang Tung, a barrister and one of the three leaders charged with subversion, wrote from prison earlier this week.

But other key figures, including Lee and Albert Ho, had signalled they supported dissolving the group.

The Liaison Office, which represents Beijing’s central government in Hong Kong, called the group’s disbanding “the inevitable fate of anti-China groups in Hong Kong,” according to state-run Xinhua news agency.

It also said that the group’s “destabilising activities” would “not be written off,” and that those who “messed up Hong Kong cannot escape justice,” Xinhua said.

Huge and often violent democracy protests engulfed Hong Kong in 2019. China responded by imposing a new national security law that has criminalised much dissent and launching a campaign to purge the city of people and groups deemed to be disloyal.

More than 90 people have been charged under the law, while dozens of civil society groups – including unions and political parties – have dissolved.

The alliance was told it was under investigation by the national security unit earlier this year and was ordered to hand over a host of documents and details on its membership.

Unlike many opposition groups which quickly folded or obeyed police requests, it took a more defiant approach.

Many of its leading figures are lawyers and they argued the police request was illegal.

Once the alliance confirmed it was not going to cooperate with the investigation, police brought subversion charges against its leaders.

Each 4 June, the group organised candlelight vigils in Hong Kong’s Victoria Park to commemorate the Tiananmen massacre. They were routinely attended by tens of thousands of residents, the crowds swelling in recent years as anger over how Beijing was running the city intensified.

That anger exploded in seven months of democracy protests in 2019.

Beijing has since made clear it will no longer tolerate Tiananmen remembrance in Hong Kong or Macau, the only two places within China where public remembrance could take place.

China’s top official in Hong Kong recently described those who call for “ending the one-party dictatorship” as “real enemies”. Police action against the alliance then intensified.

The last two Tiananmen vigils were banned, with authorities citing the coronavirus pandemic and security fears.

Most viewed

Most viewed