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Terracotta Warriors To March into Bangkok This Sept.

BANGKOK — Envoys of the first Emperor of China’s ghost army will march into Bangkok next month.

The Ministry of Culture announced on Thursday that the Bangkok National Museum will hold an exhibition “Qin Shi Huang: The First Emperor of China and the Terracotta Warriors” for three months beginning this Sept. 15. The exhibition will feature four life-sized warrior figures and a bronze chariot set, among other artifacts excavated from the tomb in Xi’an.

Anan Chuchotti, Director-General of the Fine Arts Department, said the exhibition is the culmination of three years of negotiations with Chinese counterparts.

The collection of 133 relics will span the period before the unification of China in 221 BC, the Qin dynasty, and the Han dynasty.

Archeologists believe the terracotta army was part of a mausoleum for China’s first emperor, Qin Shi Huang, to guide and protect him in the afterlife. Work on the mausoleum, which contained thousands of life-sized sculptures, is thought to have begun late into 300 BC. The sculptures were buried until they were accidentally discovered in 1974.

A common story has it that Viharnra Sien Temple temple in Chonburi province also displays terracotta warriors from Xi’an. However, the Chinese Embassy in Bangkok recently said the exhibits at Sian Temple are replicas.

“Qin Shi Huang: The First Emperor of China and the Terracotta Warriors” will be held at the Bangkok National Museum on Na Phra That Road. The exhibition is open from 9am to 4pm Wednesday-Friday (except public holidays) from Sept. 15 to Dec. 15.

The venue is reachable by a 15-minute walk from either the Tha Chang or Phra Arthit stops along the Chao Phraya Express boat services. Tickets are available at the ticket office for 30 baht for Thai nationals and 200 baht for foreigners. Explanatory texts are in Thai and English.

This story has been corrected to show that this the terracotta soldiers in Chonburi are replicas.

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King’s Consort to Help Lead Prison Charity

His Majesty the King, Chao Khun Phra Sineenat Wongvajirapakdi, and an unidentified man are seen in an official photo released by the Royal Household Bureau.

BANGKOK — A royal consort of His Majesty the King was named Friday the deputy adviser of a charity organization that aims to improve the well-being of prison inmates.

Chao Khun Phra Sineenat Wongvajirapakdi will lead the program alongside King Vajiralongkorn, who was appointed the charity’s chief adviser in a government announcement today.

The project can be roughly translated as “Sharing Happiness And Doing Good With Heart With the Department of Corrections.” According to the announcement, the organization will ensure that prison hospitals have sufficient medical equipment.

Prison staff will also be taught how to give first aid to inmates, the announcement said.

The monarch’s eldest daughter, Princess Bajrakitiyabha, will serve on the organization’s board of advisors as well.

It appears to be 34-year-old Sineenat’s first palace outreach role; an official biography listed her previous careers with the palace as mostly military roles.

She was named a Royal Consort of His Majesty the King in July, the first such appointment in nearly a century.

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This Simple Shop Might Offer Bangkok’s Best Banh Mi

The Traditional Banh Mi (150 baht) and the Pork Belly Banh Mi (130 baht).
The Traditional Banh Mi (150 baht) and the Pork Belly Banh Mi (130 baht).

Hidden away in the Thai capital, a cheerful Thai-Filipino might be serving the best banh mi you’ll ever eat.

Located deep in Soi Sukhumvit 50, family-run Bun Me has been a quiet staple for expats in the On Nut area since August 2017. You know a place is good when it’s been popularized almost entirely by word-of-mouth.

“About 70 percent of customers are Westerners. 20 percent are Japanese, and 10 percent are Thai,” owner Sydfrey Sanchez, 29, said. “I thought there would be more Thais since Thailand and Vietnam are neighboring countries.”

Although some Vietnamese cuisine is readily accessible in Bangkok, finding banh mi, especially the good kind, can be a challenge.

The Pork Belly Banh Mi (130 baht) and the Traditional Banh Mi (150 baht).
The Pork Belly Banh Mi (130 baht) and the Traditional Banh Mi (150 baht).

Eating a crispy baguette with both gun chiang Chinese sausage and Vietnamese sausage may seem counterintuitive to a Thai tongue. But the Traditional Banh Mi (150 baht) quickly puts those worries to rest with red onion, liberal coriander, and pate to bind the meat with a bed of French bread.

An even better choice is the Pork Belly Banh Mi (130 baht), full of chunky grilled pork.

But our favorite by far was the Grilled Beef Banh Mi (159 baht), full of succulent, hearty beef. Ask for extra chili so it tastes like an Isaan-Saigon lovechild, full of the zapp spiciness of beef eaten with somtam, but in a baguette lined with pate.

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Grilled Beef Banh Mi closeup (159 baht).

For a vegetarian option, order the Tofu Banh Mi (120 baht). Vegan options are available – just ask them to hold the mayo. Slap on an egg for 10 baht, or double meat fillings by adding 50 baht.

All banh mi come with the same umami sauces of pate and homemade mayo, so don’t expect different sauces for each meat option. The formula seemed to work well for the three sandwiches we tried though. A cross-section of a sandwich showed that the fillings had penetrated deep into the home-baked bread.

We also couldn’t get enough of the pickled carrot and cucumber, which offer a crunchy sweetness to the amalgam of flavors.

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Grilled Beef Banh Mi cross-section.

You’ll still get baguette-mouth from eating banh mi at Bun Me – you know, when the roof of your mouth hurts from brushing against crusty baguette. It’s worth it, though.

Stamped loyalty cards at the shop were a testament to its small, loyal fanbase. Sanchez estimates that the On Nut branch makes about 70 sandwiches per weekday, and 120 per day on the weekends.

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Sanchez, who came to Thailand in 2011 and speaks fluent Thai, decided to open Bun Me after visiting Ho Chi Minh City on vacation. His mother does a lot of the cooking, while his girlfriend helps out at the shop from time to time.

The Sukhumvit 50 joint has only six to seven tables and offers a few coffee options that range from 35 to 45 baht. Bun Me’s second branch, Bun Me 2 Go, is located down Sukhumvit 69/1 next to W District at Phra Khanong and does not offer seating. 

Although delivery is available via Grab, Line Man, and Get, we recommend eating in for the freshest banh mi experience – when the baguette’s just toasted, pickles cool, and meat warm. Expect a 7-minute wait for each banh mi at the Sukhumvit 50 branch.

Bun Me is about an 8-minute walk from BTS On Nut and is open from 10am to 10pm. 

Bun Me 2 Go is about a 5-minute walk from BTS Phra Khanong and is open from noon to 10pm. Both branches are closed on Mondays.

Sydfrey Sanchez, left, and his girlfriend.
Sydfrey Sanchez, left, and his girlfriend.
Grilled Beef Banh Mi (159 baht).
Grilled Beef Banh Mi (159 baht).

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Bun Me’s menu. Photo: Bun Me / Facebook
Bun Me’s menu. Photo: Bun Me / Facebook

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Hundreds of Chinese Books Donated to NYC Library

Readers browse books at a Xinhua Bookstore in Dingzhou, north China's Hebei Province, Aug. 18, 2019. (Xinhua/Zhu Xudong)

NEW YORK (Xinhua) — Over 300 sets of books from China were donated to a library located in a major Chinatown in New York’s Queens borough on Thursday so as to promote cultural exchanges between China and the United States.

The books, most of which were children’s books printed in both Chinese and English, covered a wide variety of topics such as Chinese history, legends, culture and art.

During a donation ceremony held on Thursday afternoon at the Queens Public Library at Flushing, Zeng Yang, chief librarian of the library, expressed gratitude for the donation.

She said that most of the second- and third-generation Chinese immigrants really need these books to gain more understanding of where their roots lie and improve their language proficiency in Chinese.

These books were displayed in the library several days ago, and readers have already borrowed them all, only leaving an empty shelf, she noted.

It marked another stop on the global journey of Nishan House, an overseas publishing agent of the Shandong Publishing Group, one of the biggest publishers in China.

Zhang Zhihua, president of the Shandong Publishing Group, said these books were selected according to the taste and demand of local readers, and he was happy to see them become so popular.

“I hope we could see more American people get interested in China through these books, which serve as a bridge between the two peoples,” he said.

There are 39 Nishan Houses located in various cities of 22 countries. In the United States, it has settled in Los Angeles and San Francisco before coming to New York.

Flushing in Queens is one of the fastest-growing ethnic Chinese enclaves in New York, with most residents here being new immigrants from the Chinese mainland.

The Queens Public Library at Flushing is one of the busiest libraries in the United States, with over 5,000 visitors on a daily basis, according to Zeng, the chief librarian.

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Ten Pandas Settle Down in East China City

A file photo of a giant panda in Nanjing, China. Image: Xinhua

NANJING (Xinhua) — Ten giant pandas, six males and four females, arrived in Nanjing, capital of east China’s Jiangsu Province Wednesday, becoming permanent settlers at a local safari park.

With the oldest 21 years old and the youngest, 3, the pandas found their new home at Ziqing Lake Safari Park located in Tangshan, which is also a renowned tourist attraction in Nanjing.

“Ten pandas in one place at a time is unprecedented. Our park now has the largest number of pandas in Jiangsu,” said Jiang Hao, deputy general manager of the park.

He said that all the pandas are from the China Conservation and Research Center for Giant Pandas in southwest China’s Sichuan Province, among which six were born overseas and later returned to China.

The pandas will be looked after by experts and trained park staff. The workers will transport bamboos from the neighboring Zhejiang Province every two or three days to ensure the quality and freshness of the food for the pandas, according to Jiang.

Each panda enjoys a living area of 500 square meters, including an indoor room of 150 square meters equipped with central air conditioning, he said.

Wang Jiaguang, general manager of the park, said the pandas would take some time to adapt to the new environment, and are expected to make their public debut in late September.

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Biden Defends Faulty Telling of Military Heroism Story

In this April 5, 2019, file photo, former Vice President Joe Biden speaks at the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers construction and maintenance conference in Washington. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta, File)

GREENVILLE, S.C. (AP) — Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden on Thursday defended his faulty description of a tale of military heroism and his interactions with the service members who carried it out.

The “essence” of his recollection is correct, the former vice president told a South Carolina newspaper Thursday after a Washington Post story detailed how an emotional anecdote Biden told recently while campaigning in New Hampshire contained inaccuracies.

Biden’s telling appeared to conflate multiple events, yielding a single story of Vice President Biden pinning a Silver Star on a U.S. Navy captain in the Konar province of Afghanistan for his efforts trying to save another service member.

In his latest telling of a story he’s varied over several years, according to the Post, Biden got most of the details wrong: There’s no military record of that specific ceremony, and Biden’s records as a senator show he traveled to Konar when he was Senate Foreign Relations Committee chairman and before he was vice president.

Biden and his aides countered that the anecdote’s fundamental point — that as vice president he once formally recognized the valor of a heartbroken solider who didn’t want the recognition because his fellow solider ultimately lost his life — is true.

“The central point is it was absolutely accurate what I said,” Biden told The Post and Courier newspaper of Charleston, South Carolina, hours after the Post published its story. “He refused the medal. I put it on him, he said: ‘Don’t do that to me, sir. He died. He died.’”

Indeed, The Post account quoted Staff Sgt. Chad Workman recalling that he received a Bronze Star from Biden at Forward Operating Base Airborne in Wardak province, Afghanistan, on Jan. 11, 2011. Workman confirmed Biden’s account, adding that Biden treated him with empathy.

The accounts represent a growing conundrum for Democrats. Their 2020 front-runner is hinging his campaign on the propositions that President Donald Trump is a serial liar and a fundamental threat to the nation and that Biden, a 76-year-old veteran of U.S. politics and world affairs, offers his party the best hope of victory.

But Biden is also repeatedly subjected to media scrutiny, social media derision and quiet grumbling from his rivals over his penchant for verbal missteps, a cacophony that fosters questions about whether he is indeed the best Democrat to send into a general election campaign against Trump.

Biden rejected those questions, telling the Post and Courier they are “ridiculous.”

Veteran Democratic strategist David Axelrod said the episode speaks to two well-known attributes of Biden: his liability as undisciplined and his strength as one who empathizes with those in pain.

Axelrod doesn’t see it as particularly damaging, but notes such episodes, should they continue, could answer one of the central question facing Biden: Is he up to the intellectual rigors of being president?

“Where it becomes problematical is if It’s seen as evidence of some sort of decay,” said Axelrod, a former senior adviser to President Barack Obama. “That is obviously a danger. Anything that raises those concerns is problematic. I don’t think this is the one that could tip the scales.”

Biden’s supporters this week in South Carolina have been unfazed by any mounting criticism — particularly in comparison to Trump, who regularly misspeaks and has treated truth casually since he first launched his campaign in 2015.

“Look at Trump, a habitual, sinister liar,” said Dawn Deboskey, a 57-year-old from Anderson, South Carolina. “The vice president is absolutely on point, discussing every issue in a knowledgeable way. I have zero concerns.”

At the campaign town hall where Deboskey came to see Biden, the candidate opted for a humorous defense against those who question whether he’s still up for the job. On education, he opted against offering detailed numbers when talking through his usual riff on the need for more social workers.

Offer a number and turn out to be wrong, Biden said, “and the press will say Biden’s losing his mind. He can’t remember.”

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Hong Kong Police Confirm Arrests of 3 Protest Leaders

In this May 16, 2019, file photo, Pro-democracy activist Joshua Wong speaks to media at a court in Hong Kong. (AP Photo/Kin Cheung, File)

HONG KONG (Xinhua) — Three leaders of political groups advocating “Hong Kong’s independence,” Joshua Wong Chi-fung, Agnes Chow Ting and Andy Chan Ho-tin, have been detained, Hong Kong police confirmed Friday.

Wong was arrested at around 7:30 a.m. Friday enroute to the South Horizons MTR station, according to the social network account of his group Demosisto.

It said that Wong was arrested on three charges and was taken to the police headquarters in Wan Chai.

Following Wong’s arrest, Chow was detained at her home, it said.

Chan said on his social network account that he was detained Thursday night at Hong Kong International Airport as he was preparing for departure.

Chan was the leader of Hong Kong National Party, a political group that has been announced illegal by the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR) government.

The Hong Kong police confirmed with Xinhua that its Organized Crime and Triad Bureau (OCTB) launched an operation on Friday morning and arrested a 22-year-old male surnamed Wong and a 22-year-old female surnamed Chow in connection with the besiege of the police headquarters on June 21.

Wong was arrested on charges of “inciting others to participate in unauthorized gatherings,” “organizing unauthorized gatherings” and “knowingly participating in unauthorized gatherings.”

Chow was arrested on charges of “inciting others to participate in unauthorized gatherings” and “knowingly participating in unauthorized gatherings.”

The OCTB arrested a 29-year-old male surnamed Chan at the airport on Thursday night, the police said, adding that the man was detained for enquiries in connection with riots and assaults on police personnel during a demonstration in Sheung Shui on July 13.

A person who is convicted with rioting faces up to 10-year imprisonment, said Grenville Cross, honorary professor of law with the University of Hong Kong and former director of public prosecutions, on Friday.

Last year, the Hong Kong Court of Final Appeal made clear that cases of public disorder that involve violence would be severely dealt with.

“I would expect the courts to keep in mind what the court of final appeal has said and to pass serious sentences,” he said

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Watchdog: Comey Violated FBI Policies in Trump Memos Handling

In this Dec. 17, 2018, file photo, former FBI Director James Comey speaks to reporters on Capitol Hill Washington. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File)

WASHINGTON (AP) — Former FBI Director James Comey violated FBI policies in his handling of memos documenting private conversations with President Donald Trump, the Justice Department’s inspector general said Thursday.

The watchdog office said Comey broke bureau rules by giving one memo containing unclassified information to a friend with instructions to share the contents with a reporter. Comey also failed to return his memos to the FBI after he was dismissed in May 2017, retaining copies of some of them in a safe at home, and shared them with his personal lawyers without permission from the FBI, the report said.

“By not safeguarding sensitive information obtained during the course of his FBI employment, and by using it to create public pressure for official action, Comey set a dangerous example for the over 35,000 current FBI employees — and the many thousands more former FBI employees — who similarly have access to or knowledge of non-public information,” the report said.

The report is the second in as many years to criticize Comey’s actions as FBI director, following a separate inspector general rebuke for decisions made during the investigation into Hillary Clinton’s use of a private email server. It is one of multiple inspector general investigations undertaken in the last three years into the decisions and actions of Comey and other senior FBI leaders.

Trump, who has long regarded Comey as one of his principal antagonists in a law enforcement community he sees as biased against him, cheered the conclusions on Twitter. He wrote: “Perhaps never in the history of our Country has someone been more thoroughly disgraced and excoriated than James Comey in the just released Inspector General’s Report. He should be ashamed of himself!”

The White House in a separate statement called Comey a “proven liar and leaker.”

But the report denied Trump and his supporters, who have repeatedly accused Comey of leaking classified information, total vindication. It found that none of the information shared by him or his attorneys with anyone in the media was classified. The Justice Department has declined to prosecute Comey.

Comey seized on that point in defending himself on Twitter, saying, “I don’t need a public apology from those who defamed me, but a quick message with a ‘sorry we lied about you’ would be nice.”

He also added: “And to all those who’ve spent two years talking about me ‘going to jail’ or being a ‘liar and a leaker’ — ask yourselves why you still trust people who gave you bad info for so long, including the president.”

At issue in the report are seven memos Comey wrote between January 2017 and April 2017 about conversations with Trump that he found unnerving or unusual.

These include a Trump Tower briefing at which Comey advised the president-elect that there was salacious and unverified information about his ties to Moscow circulating in Washington; a dinner at which Comey says Trump asked him for loyalty and an Oval Office meeting weeks later at which Comey says the president asked him to drop an investigation into former national security adviser Michael Flynn.

One week after he was fired, Comey provided a copy of the memo about Flynn to Dan Richman, his personal lawyer and a close friend, and instructed him to share the contents with a specific reporter from The New York Times.

Comey has said he wanted to make details of that conversation public to prompt the appointment of a special counsel to lead the FBI’s investigation into ties between Russia and the Trump campaign. Former FBI Director Robert Mueller was appointed special counsel one day after the story broke.

The inspector general’s office found Comey’s rationale lacking.

“In a country built on the rule of law, it is of utmost importance that all FBI employees adhere to Department and FBI policies, particularly when confronted by what appear to be extraordinary circumstances or compelling personal convictions. Comey had several other lawful options available to him to advocate for the appointment of a Special Counsel, which he told us was his goal in making the disclosure,” the report says.

“What was not permitted was the unauthorized disclosure of sensitive investigative information, obtained during the course of FBI employment, in order to achieve a personally desired outcome,” it adds.

After Comey’s firing, the FBI determined that four of the memos contained information classified at either the “secret” or “confidential” level. The memo about the Flynn interaction that Comey sent to Richman did not contain any classified information, the report said.

Comey said he considered his memos to be personal rather than government documents, and that it never would’ve occurred to him to give them back to the FBI after he was fired. The inspector general’s office disagreed, citing policy that FBI employees must give up all documents containing FBI information once they leave the bureau.

FBI agents retrieved four of Comey’s memos from his house weeks after he was fired.

The office of Inspector General Michael Horowitz also is investigating the FBI’s Russia investigation and expected to wrap up soon.

Last year, the watchdog office concluded that former FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe had misrepresented under oath his involvement in a news media disclosure, and referred him for possible prosecution. That matter remains open with the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Washington.

___

Follow Eric Tucker on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/etuckerAP

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Xi, Duterte Pledge to ‘Set Aside Disputes’ in South China Sea

Chinese President Xi Jinping meets with Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte at the Diaoyutai State Guesthouse in Beijing, capital of China, Aug. 29, 2019. (Xinhua/Pang Xinglei)

BEIJING (Xinhua) — Chinese President Xi Jinping on Thursday met with Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte at the Diaoyutai State Guesthouse in Beijing, and the two leaders expressed their readiness to push forward ties.

“Under the two sides’ joint efforts, bilateral ties smoothly realized taking an upturn and scoring consolidation and uplift, and continuously achieved tangible outcomes, during President Duterte’s administration over the past three years,” said Xi, expressing welcome for Duterte’s visit.

“At present, the international and regional situations are undergoing profound and complex changes. However, peace, development, cooperation and mutual benefit are still an irresistible trend of the times,” said Xi.

Xi said he is willing to work with Duterte to continue to grasp the trend of the times from a strategic and long-term perspective, leading the sound development of bilateral ties. “This will not only benefit the two countries and their peoples, but will also add positive energy to regional peace and stability.”

Xi said it is necessary to continue to promote the synergy between the Belt and Road Initiative and the Philippine “Build, Build, Build” program, and implement major cooperative projects in such areas as infrastructure construction, industrial parks, telecommunications and energy.

“China is willing to import more high-quality fruits and agricultural products from the Philippines, and will send experts to the Philippines to teach agricultural and fishery technology,” said Xi.

On issues such as human rights, China will continue to firmly support the Philippines’ efforts to safeguard national sovereignty and resist external interference, said the Chinese president.

On the South China Sea issue, Xi said China and the Philippines have been maintaining effective communication.

He said the two sides should set aside disputes, eliminate external interference, and concentrate on conducting cooperation, making pragmatic efforts and seeking development.

Xi said “as long as the two sides handle the South China Sea issue properly, the atmosphere of bilateral ties will be sound, the foundation of the relationship will be stable, and regional peace and stability will have an important guarantee.”

Both sides can take a “bigger step” in the joint development of offshore oil and gas, said Xi.

“The Code of Conduct (COC) in the South China Sea is a pioneering undertaking in establishing rules and regulations in the South China Sea, and China and the Philippines should be committed to promoting the adoption of the COC at an early date,” said Xi, stressing an early adoption will demonstrate the firm position and positive stance of China and the Philippines to jointly safeguard the long-term stability of the region.

Duterte expressed congratulations on the 70th anniversary of the founding of the People’s Republic of China, saying that China’s successful development experience is worth learning from.

“I cherish the close friendship with President Xi,” he said, adding that China means a lot to the Philippines and developing bilateral ties is a project lasting for generations.

He pledged to meet with Xi frequently, strengthen communication, and jointly promote the sound development of the two countries’ ties so as to achieve win-win benefits.

Duterte expressed his hope that China will continue to help the Philippines in economic development and infrastructure construction, and thanked China for support in his country’s human rights cause, post-quake reconstruction, and anti-terrorism and anti-narcotics endeavors.

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HK Democracy Activists Get Bail, Protest March Banned

Pro-democracy activists Joshua Wong, left, and Agnes Chow, are escorted in a police van at a district court in Hong Kong, Friday, Aug. 30, 2019. (AP Photo/Kin Cheung)

HONG KONG (AP) — Hong Kong activist Joshua Wong and another core member of a pro-democracy group were granted bail Friday after being charged with inciting people to join a protest in June, while authorities denied permission for a major march in what appears to be a harder line on this summer’s protests.

The organizers of Saturday’s march, the fifth anniversary of a decision by China against allowing fully democratic elections for the leader of Hong Kong, said they were calling it off after an appeals board denied permission. It was unclear whether some protesters would still demonstrate on their own.

Police have been rejecting more applications for rallies and marches, citing violence at or after earlier ones. They also are arresting people for protests earlier this summer.

Andy Chan, the leader of a pro-independence movement, was arrested at the airport Thursday night. Three others were taken in earlier this week for the vandalizing of the legislature offices on July 1.

“The first priority of the Civil Human Rights Front is to make sure that all of the participants who participate in our marches will be physically and legally safe. That’s our first priority,” said Bonnie Leung, a leader of the group. “And because of the decision made by the appeal board, we feel very sorry but we have no choice but to cancel the march.”

Police said Wong and Agnes Chow are being investigated for their role in a June 21 unauthorized protest outside a police station. Both are charged with participating in the demonstration and inciting others to join it. Wong is also charged with organizing it.

Wong is secretary-general of Demosisto and Chow is a prominent member. He was one of the student leaders of the Umbrella Movement, the major pro-democracy demonstrations in 2014.

Both were granted bail hours after their arrests.

Isaac Cheng, the vice chair of the group, said the arrests are an attempt to spread fear and “white terror” among Hong Kong residents.

He accused authorities of trying to identify leaders in a “leaderless” movement that has rocked Hong Kong for nearly three months. The Communist Party-ruled government in Beijing is pulling the strings and has misjudged the situation, he said, urging residents to continue protesting despite the risk of arrest.

Demosisto first reported the arrests on its social media accounts, saying Wong was pushed into a private car as he was heading to a subway station around 7:30 a.m. and was taken to police headquarters. It later said Chow had also been arrested, at her home.

Wong was released from prison in June after serving a two-month sentence related to that protest. He has been speaking out regularly in support of the pro-democracy protests that have racked Hong Kong this summer.

The protests were set off by extradition legislation that would have allowed suspects to be sent to mainland China to face trial and expanded to the general concern that China is chipping away at the rights of Hong Kong residents.

The extradition bill was suspended but the protesters want it withdrawn and are also demanding democracy and an independent inquiry into police actions against protesters.

Police said Chan was arrested under suspicion of rioting and attacking police.

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Associated Press writer Yanan Wang in Beijing contributed to this story.

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