2014-12-31
 
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Hong Kong authorities clean up the Lennon Wall pro-democracy site in Hong Kong, Dec. 11, 2014.
AFP
 
 
A judge in Hong Kong on Wednesday released a 14-year-old girl sent to a children’s home after chalking a flower on the Lennon Wall pro-democracy site, but under strict curfew pending further hearings.
 
As embattled Hong Kong chief executive Leung Chun-ying presided with his family over the city’s annual New Year countdown and fireworks display over the iconic Victoria Harbor, the girl, who has become known as Chalk Girl on social media, has been barred from leaving her home unaccompanied as a condition of her release, her lawyer said.
 
The would-be protester had chalked two flowers around a sticky-taped umbrella, symbol of the 79-day “Umbrella Movement” that occupied key highways and intersections in the semiautonomous Chinese city amid calls for fully democratic elections.
 
Her drawing sparked a rash of copycat chalk-drawing protests across Hong Kong, where police actions to clear protesters and an inflexible approach from local officials and the ruling Chinese Communist Party in Beijing have left public anger simmering since protest sites were cleared earlier this month.
 
Under the conditions of her release, the girl must continue her studies and observe a curfew between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m., as well as ensure she never leaves the house unaccompanied by her father, sister or a social worker.
 
Appeal hearing
 
The decision came after an emergency hearing of an appeal against the referral to a children’s home under child protection laws lodged by top barrister and Democratic Party founding chairman Martin Lee.
 
The academic activist group Scholarism set up an online petition in protest at her detention and the continuing threat of separation from her father on Thursday.
 
The girl’s detention in a children’s home sparked visits from members of Hong Kong’s Legislative Council (LegCo) earlier on Wednesday, as well as a public outcry among concerned citizens and accusations of “white terror” leveled at police and government.
 
A spokesperson for Hong Kong’s Justice Department said the child protection order had been applied for by police and been granted by the court.
 
A spokesperson for the Social Welfare department said only that the girl had “received appropriate care” while she was in the children’s home.
 
Second detention
 
The girl’s Dec. 23 detention under a child protection order is the second to be reported in connection with the Occupy Central movement.
 
In November, police detained arrested a 14-year-old boy during the clearance of a protest site in Kowloon. He has been allowed to stay with his parents while awaiting a hearing scheduled for Jan. 12.