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Protesters hold a Tibetan flag and a banner during the Olympic flame lighting ceremony at the Acropolis near Athens, Greece, for the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics. Photo: Reuters

Greek court acquits activists over 2021 protest against Beijing Olympics

  • The activists staged a protest at the Acropolis in the Greek capital Athens in 2021, holding up a Tibetan flag and a banner reading ‘Free Hong Kong – Revolution’
  • They were accused of attempting to pollute, damage and distort a historical monument and faced up to five years in prison

A Greek court has acquitted three activists detained in October 2021 after unfurling banners at the Athens Acropolis opposing the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics, their lawyer and activists said on Thursday.

Those acquitted were 19-year-old Tibetan student Tsela Zoksang, 22-year-old Hong Kongese-American Joey Siu and a 35-year old Vietnamese-American activist.

They had staged a brief protest at the Acropolis in the Greek capital, holding up a Tibetan flag and a banner reading “Free Hong Kong – Revolution” at a scaffolding surrounding part of the monument.

Activists unfurl banners promoting Hong Kong and Tibetan rights at the Athens Acropolis in Greece, the ancient landmark where the Olympic torch-lighting ceremony takes place, in October 2021. Photo: Students for a Free Tibet

They were accused of attempting to pollute, damage, and distort a historical monument and faced up to five years in prison. They were acquitted on all charges.

“It was a great day for human rights’ activists in Tibet, Hong Kong and around the globe, and although it was a highly politically sensitive case, in the end it was justice and the rule of law that have prevailed,” their lawyer Alexis Anagnostakis told Reuters.

The protest took place hours before a dress rehearsal of the torch-lighting ceremony for the Games in Greece’s Olympia, site of the ancient Olympics.

Justice Abroad, a UK-based advocacy group that provided help, welcomed the acquittal. “Today’s result is a huge victory for the right to peaceful protest and for the Tibetan and Hong Kongese people, said Michael Polak, director of the group.”

Olympic cauldron lit in Beijing as protesters face court in Athens

Rights groups and US politicians had called on the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to postpone the Games and relocate the event unless China ended what the United States deems continuing genocide against Uygurs and other Muslim minority groups.

Chinese authorities have been accused of facilitating forced labour by detaining around a million Uygurs and other primarily Muslim minorities in camps since 2016.

China denies wrongdoing, saying it has set up vocational training centres to combat extremism.

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