
Police officers stand guard at the West Kowloon Magistratesâ Courts building, ahead of hearing appeals from 12 jailed pro-democracy activists in Hong Kong, China, on July 14, 2025. File
| Photo Credit: Reuters
Hong Kong police announced bounties on Friday (July 25, 2025) for information leading to the arrest of 19 overseas activists, accusing them of national security crimes.
Political dissent in Hong Kong has been quashed since Beijing imposed a sweeping national security law in 2020 after huge, sometimes violent pro-democracy protests the year before.
Many opposition figures have fled abroad, while others have been arrested and sentenced to years in jail.
Police said the 19 activists were involved in what they called a âsubversive organisationâ, Hong Kong Parliament â a pro-democracy NGO established in Canada.
On July 1, Hong Kong Parliament said on social media that it was holding an unofficial poll online to form a âlegislatureâ, aimed at âopposing one-party dictatorship and tyranny and pursuing Hong Kong people ruling Hong Kongâ.
In a statement on Friday (July 25, 2025), police accused the group of seeking to âunlawfully overthrow and undermine the fundamental systemâ of the Chinese and Hong Kong authorities.
The investigation into the organisation is ongoing, the police said, warning that they âwill offer bounties to hunt down more suspects in the case if necessaryâ.
They also called on the accused to âreturn to Hong Kong and turn themselves in, rather than make further mistakesâ.
A reward of HK$200,000 ($25,500) each was offered for 15 of the activists, while the four others were already wanted for HK$1 million, the statement said.
Symbolic bounties
The bounties are seen as largely symbolic given that they affect people living abroad in nations unlikely to extradite political activists to Hong Kong or China.
Fridayâs (July 25, 2025) announcement is the fourth time the financial hubâs authorities have offered rewards for help capturing those alleged to have violated the cityâs national security laws.
According to the Hong Kong policeâs website, as of Friday (July 25, 2025) there are now 34 people wanted for national security offences, including secession, subversion, or foreign collusion.
Previous rounds of bounties were met with intense criticism from Western countries, with Hong Kong and China in turn railing against foreign âinterferenceâ.
Hong Kong has also previously cancelled the passports of other pro-democracy activists on its wanted list, under its second homegrown national security law enacted in 2024.
As of July 1, authorities had arrested 333 people for alleged national security crimes, with 165 convicted in Hong Kong.
Earlier this month, Hong Kong police arrested four people, including a 15-year-old, who were allegedly part of a group in Taiwan that called for the overthrow of the Chinese Communist Party.
This week police said they had arrested an 18-year-old for writing âseditious wordsâ on a toilet wall in a commercial building.
Published â July 25, 2025 04:40 pm IST