Murder suspect whose case was catalyst for Hong Kong protests released

After 19 months in jail, 20-year-old murder suspect Chan Tong-kai says he is willing to turn himself in to Taiwan.

Chan Tong-kai is accompanied by Anglican pastor Peter Koon as he walks out of the Pik Uk Correctional Institution in Hong Kong.

Chan Tong-kai is accompanied by Anglican pastor Peter Koon as he walks out of the Pik Uk Correctional Institution in Hong Kong. Source: AAP

A murder suspect whose proposed deportation to Taiwan was a catalyst for huge anti-extradition protests in Hong Kong has been released from prison but, despite saying he wanted to face justice, will remain in the city as a diplomatic spat continues.

Months of increasingly violent pro-democracy demonstrations in the financial hub were sparked by protests against a now-cancelled extradition law -- which would have allowed suspects to be extradited to the authoritarian mainland China.
Chan Tong-kai is accused of murdering his pregnant girlfriend in Taiwan last year.
Chan Tong-kai is accused of murdering his pregnant girlfriend in Taiwan last year. Source: AAP
Hong Konger Chan Tong-kai, 20, is wanted in Taiwan for the 2018 murder of his pregnant girlfriend Poon Hiu-wing.

Chan, who spent 18 months in custody over money laundering charges, apologised to the victim's family and the city as he left the maximum security prison.

He apologised for the great "pain and agony" he had caused Poon's family, and hoped his decision to surrender would offer them some relief.

"As for the society and Hong Kongers, I could only (say) I'm sorry," he said, adding that he hoped to be forgiven and start life afresh.
Chan, ignoring reporters' other questions, said: "I am willing to surrender myself... and go back to Taiwan to face the trial and serve the sentence."

However, Chan will not leave Hong Kong for Taiwan yet.

Taiwanese authorities said in a press conference that he would not be admitted to the self-ruled island like ordinary visitors, according to reverend Peter Koon, who frequently visited Chan in prison.

"Our original plan was that I would accompany him to Taiwan and (the press) wouldn't have seen him," Koon told AFP, adding that Chan would have been sent directly from the prison to the city's airport.

Taiwan had said it asked to collect Chan -- and the relevant evidence -- but was rejected by Hong Kong authorities, who called the request disrespectful and "totally unacceptable".

The city has seen the worst unrest since the city's handover from Britain, as the movement sparked by opposition to the extraction bill seeks greater democracy and police accountability.


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Source: AFP, SBS

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