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City Weekend
Hong KongSociety

Hong Kong ex-convict helps out those still behind bars with grass-roots book donation initiative

  • Despite not being a ‘book person’ when he first went to prison, Rizzy Pennelli says he ultimately found a new career because of reading
  • His initiative, called ‘Readin’ Mates’, collected its first batch of 2,708 books to the city’s inmates on Saturday

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Former prisoner Rizzy Pennelli is the founding member of Readin’ Mates. Photo: Xiaomei Chen
Laura Westbrook

The day Rizzy Pennelli was convicted on bomb-making charges should have been a special one for entirely different reasons.

It was a day he would never forget, he said, recalling how his Italian father put his head in his hands and wept as the judgment was read out.

“I went to prison on my father’s birthday,” he said.

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On November 11, 2017, Pennelli, then 24, was found guilty alongside another alleged member of a pro-independence party of producing and possessing explosive substances in the lead-up to a vote in the city’s legislature on a controversial electoral reform bill in 2015.

Volunteers collect and check donated books for prisoners. Photo: Xiaomei Chen
Volunteers collect and check donated books for prisoners. Photo: Xiaomei Chen
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In a case that shocked the Hong Kong public, Pennelli – who still denies belonging to the party – was one of five men arrested for making smoke bombs in a bid to disrupt the Legislative Council vote.
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