Berliner Boersenzeitung - Sedition clampdown hits 'ordinary' Hong Kongers

EUR -
AED 4.291518
AFN 81.206138
ALL 97.736885
AMD 448.444329
ANG 2.09153
AOA 1071.424762
ARS 1538.513486
AUD 1.78876
AWG 2.103124
AZN 1.953872
BAM 1.968524
BBD 2.359451
BDT 142.128682
BGN 1.955894
BHD 0.440525
BIF 3446.786616
BMD 1.168402
BND 1.503615
BOB 8.075718
BRL 6.311939
BSD 1.168553
BTN 102.445758
BWP 15.732702
BYN 3.857783
BYR 22900.683958
BZD 2.347424
CAD 1.609638
CDF 3376.682411
CHF 0.942217
CLF 0.028498
CLP 1117.98599
CNY 8.388193
CNH 8.392067
COP 4697.561217
CRC 591.159042
CUC 1.168402
CUP 30.962659
CVE 110.823138
CZK 24.469798
DJF 207.648098
DKK 7.462655
DOP 71.769097
DZD 152.001424
EGP 56.57635
ERN 17.526034
ETB 163.430286
FJD 2.631008
FKP 0.865009
GBP 0.864916
GEL 3.148828
GGP 0.865009
GHS 12.316664
GIP 0.865009
GMD 84.709161
GNF 10134.46136
GTQ 8.965953
GYD 244.495972
HKD 9.17187
HNL 30.773487
HRK 7.537947
HTG 153.210101
HUF 395.845331
IDR 18970.687023
ILS 3.984129
IMP 0.865009
INR 102.47131
IQD 1530.797603
IRR 49218.944625
ISK 143.258403
JEP 0.865009
JMD 186.928263
JOD 0.828386
JPY 172.848949
KES 151.308759
KGS 102.059755
KHR 4681.045545
KMF 492.481294
KPW 1051.489033
KRW 1616.080316
KWD 0.35698
KYD 0.973857
KZT 632.075665
LAK 25270.05346
LBP 104680.536659
LKR 351.8544
LRD 235.208338
LSL 20.682857
LTL 3.449988
LVL 0.706755
LYD 6.344856
MAD 10.572984
MDL 19.465373
MGA 5176.354661
MKD 61.585983
MMK 2452.751192
MNT 4202.030238
MOP 9.449284
MRU 46.648422
MUR 53.080516
MVR 17.994329
MWK 2027.428281
MXN 21.703913
MYR 4.931815
MZN 74.731006
NAD 20.682857
NGN 1792.909864
NIO 43.007993
NOK 11.922609
NPR 163.902449
NZD 1.961015
OMR 0.449248
PAB 1.168402
PEN 4.122345
PGK 4.852771
PHP 66.419579
PKR 331.726434
PLN 4.257197
PYG 8752.483121
QAR 4.254983
RON 5.06467
RSD 117.191251
RUB 92.829566
RWF 1689.495058
SAR 4.384877
SBD 9.616642
SCR 17.226659
SDG 701.623887
SEK 11.149548
SGD 1.498429
SHP 0.918181
SLE 27.108464
SLL 24500.810237
SOS 667.786307
SRD 43.719857
STD 24183.567431
STN 24.850587
SVC 10.225092
SYP 15191.507565
SZL 20.678146
THB 37.787268
TJS 10.92683
TMT 4.101092
TND 3.377074
TOP 2.813232
TRY 47.600159
TTD 7.929765
TWD 35.021103
TZS 3002.794345
UAH 48.486104
UGX 4159.864664
USD 1.168402
UYU 46.790316
UZS 14686.463752
VES 155.108362
VND 30694.923497
VUV 139.682586
WST 3.10576
XAF 656.222332
XAG 0.03051
XAU 0.000349
XCD 3.157666
XCG 2.106012
XDR 0.820612
XOF 656.222332
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.737791
ZAR 20.523091
ZMK 10517.007643
ZMW 26.966032
ZWL 376.225045
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    73.08

    0%

  • RYCEF

    0.6400

    14.94

    +4.28%

  • BCC

    3.5200

    84.26

    +4.18%

  • NGG

    -0.9500

    70.28

    -1.35%

  • RIO

    0.9600

    63.1

    +1.52%

  • SCS

    0.2300

    16.19

    +1.42%

  • VOD

    0.0300

    11.54

    +0.26%

  • RELX

    -0.2100

    47.83

    -0.44%

  • GSK

    0.5100

    38.22

    +1.33%

  • CMSC

    0.0200

    23.08

    +0.09%

  • AZN

    1.2700

    75.34

    +1.69%

  • SCU

    0.0000

    12.72

    0%

  • BCE

    0.1500

    24.5

    +0.61%

  • JRI

    -0.0100

    13.38

    -0.07%

  • CMSD

    -0.0107

    23.56

    -0.05%

  • BTI

    -0.4100

    57.92

    -0.71%

  • BP

    0.1200

    34.07

    +0.35%

Advertisement Image
Sedition clampdown hits 'ordinary' Hong Kongers
Sedition clampdown hits 'ordinary' Hong Kongers / Photo: Isaac LAWRENCE - AFP

Sedition clampdown hits 'ordinary' Hong Kongers

Single mother Law Oi-wah pled guilty to sedition in an almost inaudible voice, as her 12-year-old son watched from a few feet away in a Hong Kong court.

Advertisement Image

Text size:

Arrested in March, the 48-year-old was accused under a colonial-era law for sharing dozens of pro-democracy social media posts authored by others, and then denied bail.

But Law is not an activist, and her posts received sparse reactions.

"My mother has been away for a month... Please let my mother come home," Law's son wrote to the court, which sentenced her in April to four months in jail.

Her prosecution is one in a string of sedition convictions in the city, where critics say Beijing is tightening its authoritarian grip.

After massive and at times violent pro-democracy protests in 2019, and Beijing's subsequently imposed national security law, Hong Kong has used the sedition offence -- created under British colonial rule -- to charge residents for the first time in over 50 years.

From service industry workers to delivery staff, at least 20 of the more than 30 peoplecharged with sedition have not been activists nor politicians.

Their cases receive little public attention as they are swiftly convicted as national security threats by the city's lowest-level courts.

Their "seditious" acts have mostly involved criticising authorities -- the government, police and courts -- through posters, stickers or on social media platforms.

The trials are also handled by judges picked by the government to rule on security cases, and bail for defendants has become the exception, not the norm.

Prominent activists and journalists charged with sedition have put up high-profile legal defences, but most residents accused of the crime choose not to fight after they are denied bail, due to the perceived slim chance of success, former defendants and lawyers told AFP.

- Plead for quicker exit -

Kenji, who requested a pseudonym to avoid reprisals, said his will to fight his sedition case collapsed after he spent five months in pre-trial detention.

"When you are inside... you would spend all day thinking whether the prosecution would add an actual national security charge on you," he told AFP.

"Although you might find it very unfair, you would offer a guilty plea in exchange for a quicker exit," said Kenji, who was arrested for publicly criticising officials.

Sedition carries a penalty of up to two years in prison, but a guilty plea can reduce the sentence by a third.

Of the 18 sedition defendants convicted at the magistrate level, more than 80 percent pled guilty within three months -- triple the rate of all cases handled in 2022.

On average, they were sentenced to about 200 days in prison, according to an AFP tally.

The city's security minister, Chris Tang, has said the sedition charge remains a necessary tool to plug gaps in the national security law.

"Some other existing laws... such as sedition can handle some situations for now," Tang told broadcaster RTHK in April.

The law covers acts, speech or publications deemed to have any "seditious intentions", which include raising "discontent or disaffection", promoting "feelings of ill-will" and inciting violence.

The United Nations Human Rights Committee has said it is concerned about the "overly broad interpretation and arbitrary application" of both the sedition and security laws -- warning against using them to suppress dissent.

Senior officials say the laws are clear.

- 'Wide and mysterious' -

But Kim Hau, whose tea shop was raided by police last February when she was arrested for sedition, said the offence remains "wide and mysterious" to her.

Hau had posted flyers questioning the city's Covid vaccination scheme and urged people to boycott a government location-tracking anti-pandemic app.

During the raid, her phone was confiscated, and she was later sentenced to seven months in jail, with judge Peter Law saying she and a co-defendant were "venting the hatred in their heart".

"They define something as seditious when they feel you are urging people to directly or indirectly act against the government," she told AFP.

One lawyer working on sedition cases agreed the offence has a "lack of legal certainty".

"Such ambiguity is something they want," the lawyer, who requested anonymity, told AFP. "It's just enough to scare off the ordinary."

The burden of proof is also placed on defendants, they said, explaining that taking a stand to "clarify their intention" is not something the average resident would do.

"Meanwhile, it's rather easy for the prosecution to deduce the intention backwards with their own interpretation of certain words said by the accused."

- 'The red line' -

Homemaker Chiu Mei-ying, 68, found herself in the crosshairs of authorities when she was charged last April with saying "seditious words".

"All I did was utter one sentence," she told AFP.

Three months earlier, Chiu and preacher Garry Pang had attended an activist's conviction hearing and verbally criticised the magistrate judge.

The trial ended up costing her over HK$300,000 ($38,400).

Chiu eventually gave up on her appeal and served out her three-month sentence so that she wouldn't have to report to the police three times a week -- a bail condition stipulated for her appeal process.

After all that, "I still don't understand what sedition is about," she said.

"I have only learned that the red line can be very wide."

(A.Berg--BBZ)

Advertisement Image