Young Hong Kong democracy protester says he was beaten by prison guards

By Jessie Pang

HONG KONG, Aug 28 (Reuters) - A 21-year-old man told Reuters he was beaten and humiliated by guards in a Hong Kong prison during his sentence for possessing a Molotov cocktail at an anti-government protest in October.

Roy Cheung said guards routinely slapped him, hit him with rulers and elbowed his spine at the Pik Uk Correctional Institution in Hong Kong’s New Territories.

In one instance, on Feb. 7, he said he was targeted for beating because he was one of six prisoners who sang the pro-democracy protest anthem “Glory to Hong Kong.”

“We sang in the cell,” said Cheung. “We were punished the next day.” Cheung said a guard told him to say thank you as he slapped him once.

Cheung, who served his eight-month sentence from Nov. 2 to June 30, told Reuters he filed an official complaint about the beatings to the Complaints Investigation Unit of Hong Kong’s Correctional Services Department, which runs the city’s prisons, in May. Reuters did not see a copy of the complaint, which was made while Cheung was in prison, and which Cheung said he was not given a copy of.

The commissioner replied in a letter dated July 10, seen by Reuters, that the Complaints Investigation Unit was investigating his complaint.

A representative of the Correctional Services Department declined comment on Cheung’s complaint, saying the department does not comment on individual cases. The person said the department’s Complaints Investigation Unit would conduct a fair, just and detailed investigation of every complaint.

Cheung told Reuters he wanted to make his complaint public in an effort to prevent mistreatment of other protesters who are still detained at Pik Uk.

Four other 18 and 19-year-old pro-democracy protesters, who asked to be identified only by their first names Tom, Ivan, Jackson and Henry, described similar abuse as they were held at Pik Uk after courts refused to grant them bail when they were charged with protest-related offences. The four have since been released from Pik Uk and are awaiting trial.

The men said the prison guards hit them in ways to avoid bruising and scars and in places in the prison where there was no CCTV, such as near staircases outside the activity room or inside bathrooms.

The Correctional Services Department told Reuters it was investigating the allegations made by the men.

None of the men has filed an official complaint with the Correctional Services Department, saying they feared retaliation by guards if they have to return to Pik Uk.

Cheung told Reuters his cell was inspected by guards every day after he filed a complaint and that he was put in solitary confinement for some periods.