HK student leader Wong barred from Malaysia
KUALA LUMPUR: Hong Kong student leader Joshua Wong was on Tuesday refused admission to Malaysia, where he planned to speak about the city’s pro-democracy movement and the anniversary of China’s Tiananmen Square massacre.Wong was the teenage face of the “Umbrella Movement”, which brought parts of Hong Kong to a standstill
By our correspondents
May 27, 2015
KUALA LUMPUR: Hong Kong student leader Joshua Wong was on Tuesday refused admission to Malaysia, where he planned to speak about the city’s pro-democracy movement and the anniversary of China’s Tiananmen Square massacre.
Wong was the teenage face of the “Umbrella Movement”, which brought parts of Hong Kong to a standstill for more than two months late last year with mass rallies calling for fully free leadership elections.
“This morning we stopped Hong Kong activist Joshua Wong from entering Penang. We subsequently deported him back to Hong Kong on the same Dragonair flight,” an immigration official at Penang airport said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
The official declined to say why Wong was denied entry.
On his arrival back in Hong Kong on Tuesday evening, Wong said customs officers in Malaysia had taken his passport and air ticket for half an hour before telling him he had to return to Hong Kong “immediately”.
“I asked what’s the reason? Were there any documents? And the representative only said it was a government order,” Wong told reporters.
“I asked if there was any detailed information about the government order and they didn’t want to respond. They tried to grab my arms and take me away.”
Wong said he thought there was a “political reason” behind his rejection but added: “I don’t understand how there is any relation between the Umbrella Movement and Malaysia’s national security.”
Wong, 18, said he had been invited to “share his experience and views on the Umbrella Movement and the June 4 incident”, according to the South China Morning Post.
His visit came less than two weeks before the 26th anniversary on June 4 of the Tiananmen Square massacre of pro-democracy protesters in Beijing.
Hong Kong commemorates the anniversary each year with a candlelit vigil attended by thousands in the city’s Victoria Park.
Wong called on the Hong Kong government to look into his case, saying it was an infringement of his right to travel freely.
“I don’t understand why Malaysia refused me as I’m fighting for universal suffrage within China, not in Malaysia,” he added.
Democracy activists reject Beijing’s restrictions on a proposed public vote for Hong Kong’s leader in 2017 which stipulate that candidates must be vetted by a loyalist committee.
Hong Kong’s security bureau said the government “attaches importance” to residents’ rights outside Hong Kong, but did not say whether it would intervene in Wong’s case.
Wong was the teenage face of the “Umbrella Movement”, which brought parts of Hong Kong to a standstill for more than two months late last year with mass rallies calling for fully free leadership elections.
“This morning we stopped Hong Kong activist Joshua Wong from entering Penang. We subsequently deported him back to Hong Kong on the same Dragonair flight,” an immigration official at Penang airport said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
The official declined to say why Wong was denied entry.
On his arrival back in Hong Kong on Tuesday evening, Wong said customs officers in Malaysia had taken his passport and air ticket for half an hour before telling him he had to return to Hong Kong “immediately”.
“I asked what’s the reason? Were there any documents? And the representative only said it was a government order,” Wong told reporters.
“I asked if there was any detailed information about the government order and they didn’t want to respond. They tried to grab my arms and take me away.”
Wong said he thought there was a “political reason” behind his rejection but added: “I don’t understand how there is any relation between the Umbrella Movement and Malaysia’s national security.”
Wong, 18, said he had been invited to “share his experience and views on the Umbrella Movement and the June 4 incident”, according to the South China Morning Post.
His visit came less than two weeks before the 26th anniversary on June 4 of the Tiananmen Square massacre of pro-democracy protesters in Beijing.
Hong Kong commemorates the anniversary each year with a candlelit vigil attended by thousands in the city’s Victoria Park.
Wong called on the Hong Kong government to look into his case, saying it was an infringement of his right to travel freely.
“I don’t understand why Malaysia refused me as I’m fighting for universal suffrage within China, not in Malaysia,” he added.
Democracy activists reject Beijing’s restrictions on a proposed public vote for Hong Kong’s leader in 2017 which stipulate that candidates must be vetted by a loyalist committee.
Hong Kong’s security bureau said the government “attaches importance” to residents’ rights outside Hong Kong, but did not say whether it would intervene in Wong’s case.
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