in 2009 to commemorate the victims in the 1989
Tiananmen massacre. The group is well known for its aggressive and
civil disobedience-style actions to protest against the governments of China and Hong Kong during celebrations and visits of state leaders, often resulting in confrontations with the
Hong Kong police. They usually carry a coffin as their trademark protest prop. Its members have also been prosecuted for disrupting meetings of the
Legislative Council of Hong Kong (LegCo). The group was one of the major supporters of the
Tiananmen Square protest of 1989 in Hong Kong. Its members went to the
New China News Agency Hong Kong branch demanding the PRC government open dialogue with students on democratic reform and rule of law in late April. It condemned the bloody suppression of the protest. The members were prosecuted with the Summer Offences Ordinance after their demonstrations outside a reception hosted by the New China News Agency on 29 September 1989 to mark the
National Day of the People's Republic of China. That raised concern that the British administration might be using out-of-date and repressive colonial laws for the political appeasing the People's Republic of China government after Beijing accusations that the British Hong Kong administration was allowing Hong Kong to be used as a base for subversion of the People's Republic of China. In a protest on 1 June 1997 just a month before the
handover of Hong Kong which drew a crowd of 5,000 people in Hong Kong going from
Chater Garden to the New China News Agency. The group was blocked off by the Hong Kong police, and did not succeed in presenting a petition to the news office. While the event led Hong Kong news headlines, China's main
CCTV station promoted the opposite propaganda on the mainland by featuring children in
Wan Chai waiving PRC flags. Critics have questioned the effectiveness of the group, since Beijing has continued to censor news of the group's activities entirely in the mainland. ==Elections==