Advertisement

Hong Kong protests: computer technician jailed for 32 months over rioting outside police station

  • District Court also fines Jason Tam, 24, for smashing glass window at Tseung Kwan O Police Station amid anti-government protests in 2019
  • Tam was among 300 people who paralysed traffic in the Kowloon East district in rally against now-withdrawn extradition bill

Reading Time:2 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
Anti-extradition bill protesters throw bricks outside Tseung Kwan O Police Station in 2019. Photo: Winson Wong

A computer technician has been jailed for 32 months for rioting outside a Hong Kong police station after an approved rally against a now-withdrawn extradition bill three years ago descended into chaos.

Advertisement

The District Court on Monday also fined Jason Tam Ka-keung HK$3,000 (US$385) for smashing a glass window at Tseung Kwan O Police Station with a flying brick amid confrontations between protesters and officers during the early hours of August 5 in 2019, the year of anti-government demonstrations in the city.

Shortly before the sentence, the 24-year-old defendant pleaded guilty to rioting pursuant to a plea bargain, with prosecutors agreeing not to proceed with a second charge of criminal damage provided that he admit liability.

The District Court has also fined Jason Tam, 24, for smashing a glass window at Tseung Kwan O Police Station. Photo: Jelly Tse
The District Court has also fined Jason Tam, 24, for smashing a glass window at Tseung Kwan O Police Station. Photo: Jelly Tse

Tam was among 300 people who had paralysed traffic in the Kowloon East district that night to show anger with police, as they accused officers of knowingly breaking the law and colluding with triad members during the movement that year sparked by the extradition bill.

Police were accused of inaction when a group of rod-wielding, white-clad men attacked protesters and railway passengers in Yuen Long on July 21, 2019. The force has said its attention was diverted due to large-scale demonstrations elsewhere in the city.

The District Court heard protesters began surrounding Tseung Kwan O Police Station in the evening of August 4, after a lawful procession where participants demanded the withdrawal of an extradition bill which would have enabled the transfer of fugitives to mainland China.

The siege continued into the next day, with protesters hurling bricks and shining laser lights at the police building. Some also vandalised a gate at the entrance and water-filled barriers surrounding the premises.

Advertisement