Freedom ‘slowly being obliterated’ by attacks on activists, says Joshua Wong after assault

Joshua Wong, the teenage face of the city’s pro-democracy protests, was assaulted in the street with his girlfriend in an attack he said yesterday sent a ‘chill to my heart’.

The motivation for the assault is not known but previous high-profile attacks against prominent media figures have raised concerns that tensions from Hong Kong’s deep political divisions could turn violent.

Wong, 18, was leaving a cinema near Mong Kok — the scene of some of the most bitter clashes in last year’s street rallies — with his girlfriend late Sunday when the assault occurred.

The male attacker punched Wong in the face and when he and his girlfriend gave chase both were assaulted, he said on his Facebook page.

“Being attacked on the way home after going on a date, and even attacking my girlfriend, it’s shameful,” he said.

Police said yesterday they had yet to make an arrest, confirming that Wong had ‘suddenly been attacked’ by a suspect in his 20s and had sustained injuries to his eyes and nose.

“The suspect tried to flee but the two victims followed, and when the female tried to take pictures of the suspect he then attacked the male and female victims,” a police spokeswoman said.

“(The assault) implies activists are facing the danger of attacks in their daily lives, not only during protests. This is what sends a chill to my heart,” Wong wrote in an emotional Facebook post.

“It’s not only a problem with universal suffrage — it’s about the limited freedom and legal system slowly being obliterated by these violent acts.”

“The road ahead is long and tough, but we should retain our goal and keep walking on this bumpy road of democracy.”

Other leading anti-establishment figures targeted in the past include media tycoon Jimmy Lai, whose office and home were firebombed in January.

Kevin Lau, former editor of the liberal Ming Pao newspaper, was attacked by knife-wielding assailants in February last year.

Separately, scuffles broke out between pro-Beijing and anti-mainland protest groups in Mong Kok Sunday night.

Five people were arrested after police used pepper spray to separate the groups. 

Words: AFP
Photo: Joshua Wong via Facebook 

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