Five Hong Kong teenagers sentenced in first security case involving
minors
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[October 08, 2022]
By James Pomfret and Jessie Pang
HONG KONG (Reuters) - Five teenagers with a
Hong Kong group advocating independence from Chinese rule were ordered
by a judge on Saturday to serve up to three years in detention at a
correctional facility, for urging an "armed revolution" in a national
security case.
The five, some of whom were minors aged between 15 and 18 at the time of
the alleged offence, had pleaded guilty to "inciting others to subvert
state power" through a group named "Returning Valiant".
Sentences for two more, aged 21 and 26, will be delivered at a later
date.
Justice Kwok Wai-kin detailed how the defendants had advocated a "bloody
revolution" to overthrow the Chinese state at street booths, and on
Instagram and Facebook after adoption of a sweeping, China-imposed
national security law.
Kwok called the alleged incitement a serious crime, but nevertheless
took into account their "age and immaturity" as he sentenced them to a
training center, or detention facility for young people, rather than
jail.
The length of stay, capped at three years, is left to correctional
authorities to decide.
"Even if only one person is incited by them, the social stability of
Hong Kong and the safety of residents may be seriously endangered," Kwok
added.
"There's no evidence to directly prove that anyone was incited by the
defendants to subvert state power, but this real risk exists."
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Chinese and Hong Kong flags, decorating
a street, hang in the rain, before the 25th anniversary of the
former British colony's handover to Chinese rule, in Hong Kong,
China June 30, 2022. REUTERS/Paul Yeung
Four of the five have already been remanded in custody for more than
a year, with only one granted bail.
Prosecutors Anthony Chau and Stella Lo earlier told the court that
the group's pamphlets mentioned the French and Ukrainian Revolutions
as examples of successful armed rebellions, and quoted Mao Zedong on
a revolution being "a violent act of one class overthrowing
another".
Prosecutors detailed how the police had seized flags, leaflets, air
guns, ammunition and extendable batons in an industrial building.
At least 22 people linked to the group were arrested last year.
Several face a separate charge of conspiring to commit terrorism
under the security law.
Authorities in Beijing and Hong Kong say the security law has
restored stability to the global financial hub after mass
anti-government and pro-democracy protests in 2019.
Human rights experts on the United Nations Human Rights Committee,
however, called for the law to be repealed in a July report, amid
concerns it is being used to crack down on fundamental freedoms.
(Editing by Clarence Fernandez)
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