Carrie Lam was selected as the new chief executive yesterday by a committee dominated by pro-China voters, but promised to try to unify the deeply divided city.
The vote was dismissed as a sham by democracy campaigners who fear Beijing is tightening its grip on semi-autonomous Hong Kong and say Lam will be no different from its unpopular current leader, Leung Chun-ying.
Those concerns were heightened today when police informed several leading campaigners who took part in the Umbrella Movement of 2014 that they would be charged in connection with the rallies.
Civic Party lawmaker Tanya Chan told AFP she had received a call from police Friday morning telling her she would be charged with causing a public nuisance, with a maximum sentence of seven years.
"They said it was related to the 'illegal occupation' of 2014," she said, describing it as a "death kiss" from Leung, who will step down in July.
Chan said she had been arrested immediately after the protests, but had never been charged.
She will report to a police station today evening and will go to court Thursday.
Activist Raphael Wong of the League of Social Democrats told AFP he would also be charged with public nuisance and blamed Leung.
"As Carrie Lam talks about unity, they are saying you don't need it," he told AFP.
Professor Chan Kin-man, a founding member of Hong Kong's Occupy Central, one of the groups behind the protests, also received a call from police informing him of an impending charge and called the move "ridiculous".
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