Skip to main contentSkip to navigationSkip to navigation
Edward Leung (C) of the group Hong Kong Indigenous speaks as he attends a pre-election campaign event in Hong Kong on February 27, 2016.
Edward Leung speaks at a pre-election campaign event in 2016. The Hong Kong independence activist has been released after four years in prison over rioting during the 2016 Fishball Revolution. Photograph: Anthony Wallace/AFP/Getty Images
Edward Leung speaks at a pre-election campaign event in 2016. The Hong Kong independence activist has been released after four years in prison over rioting during the 2016 Fishball Revolution. Photograph: Anthony Wallace/AFP/Getty Images

Hong Kong activist who coined banned independence slogan released from prison

This article is more than 2 years old

Edward Leung, who came up with ‘Liberate Hong Kong, revolution of our times’, has spent four years in prison over 2016 riots

Hong Kong activist Edward Leung, who coined the now-banned slogan “Liberate Hong Kong, revolution of our times” has been released from prison and placed under strict supervision after spending four years behind bars.

The prominent independence activist said in a statement posted on his Facebook page – hours after his reported release at about 3am on Wednesday – that he was back with his family.

“As required by law, I am subject to a supervision order upon release,” he wrote in the post, adding that he would stop using social media and will not be taking any media interviews or visits.

“After four years, I want to cherish this precious time to reunite with my family and resume a normal life with them,” Leung said, before thanking his supporters for their concern and love. His Facebook account was deleted an hour later.

Leung was the spokesman of Hong Kong Indigenous, a pro-independence group in the city that was outspoken about “localism” and the need to preserve a distinct Hong Kong identity.

In 2018, the 30-year-old activist was convicted of assaulting a police officer and rioting in 2016 during what is now known as the Fishball Revolution. The unrest began when authorities attempted to crack down on unlicensed hawkers selling street food during the 2016 lunar new year holidays in Mong Kok, but clashed with protesters who opposed their actions as an attack on local traditions.

A rioter tries to throw bricks at police in Mong Kok district of Hong Kong, Tuesday, Feb. 9, 2016. Hong Kong's Lunar New Year celebration descended into chaotic scenes as protesters and police clashed over a street market selling fish balls and other local holiday delicacies. (AP Photo/Vincent Yu) Photograph: Vincent Yu/AP

Initially sentenced to six years of imprisonment, Leung had his sentence reduced by two years for good behaviour, according to local media reports.

Leung’s release comes during a crackdown on political dissent in Hong Kong, with authorities arresting a majority of Hong Kong’s outspoken pro-democracy activists over the past two years. Many of the city’s prominent activists are behind bars or have fled overseas to continue their activism.

Leung is known for coining the slogan “Liberate Hong Kong, revolution of our times” for his election campaign, when he attempted to run for a seat in the legislature in 2016. He was later disqualified.

The phrase became a popular protest slogan during the 2019 protests, but authorities have since banned the slogan, stating it has secessionist connotations that are illegal under the national security law (NSL) implemented in 2020. The NSL outlaws secession, subversion, terrorism and foreign collusion to intervene in the city’s affairs.

Leung advocated so-called forceful resistance against political violence in his campaigns, which was considered a polarising opinion and drew opposition from the city’s more traditional pro-democracy camp.

However, his stance of a more active form of resistance also drew the attention of young voters, and many of his ideas, such as “leaderless” protests, were later employed during the months of anti-government protests in 2019.

In a post on Leung’s Facebook page on Tuesday – a day before his release – Leung’s family urged supporters to let Leung “reunite with his family” and urged supporters to prioritise their own safety.

Most viewed

Most viewed