Hong Kong uses new national security law against exiled activists
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[June 12, 2024]
By Farah Master and Jessie Pang
HONG KONG (Reuters) - Hong Kong's Security Bureau said on Wednesday it
would use powers in a new national security law against six self-exiled
activists residing in Britain, including cancelling their passports,
after they fled the China-ruled city.
The six are Nathan Law, Christopher Mung Siu-tat, Finn Lau, Simon Cheng,
Johnny Fok Ka-chi and Tony Choi Ming-da. City authorities put them on a
wanted list last year.
"These lawless wanted criminals are hiding in the United Kingdom and
continue to blatantly engage in activities that endanger national
security," the bureau said in a statement.
"They continue to collude with external forces to protect their evil
deeds. We therefore have taken such measures to give them a strong
blow," it added, noting that these moves involved exercising powers in a
new set of national security laws known as Article 23, which were
enacted in March.
Hong Kong authorities have outlawed more than a dozen overseas activists
based in the United States, Britain and other countries. A bounty of
HK$1 million ($128,000) for information for these activists was also
offered.
The new measures for the six in Britain prohibits providing them with
funds and cancels their business dealings in Hong Kong. The new security
bill includes punishments for offences including treason, sabotage and
sedition.
Security chief Chris Tang called the measures against the activists "a
necessary action" at a news conference on Wednesday.
Tang said all six have been harbored in Britain and continue to collude
with external forces to engage in activities that endanger the national
security of Hong Kong and China.
He also criticized British politicians, organizations and media outlets
for "deliberately discrediting" the Hong Kong government.
When asked whether cancelling the activists' passports violated their
rights of freedom of movement guaranteed in the International Covenant
on Civil and Political Rights, Tang said "there are exceptions because
of national security grounds, and this is not just applicable to Hong
Kong but applied to all civilized society".
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Finn Lau, Hong Kong's political activist, attends a rally in
solidarity with Hong Kong residents, as the Article 23 national
security laws come into force, in London, Britain, March 23, 2024.
REUTERS/Hollie Adams/File photo
The Article 23 laws come on top of a sweeping China-imposed national
security law in 2020 that has been used to jail pro-democracy
activists, as well as shutter liberal media outlets and civil
society groups.
Crimes such as subversion, collusion with external forces, sedition,
theft of state secrets and espionage now carry jail terms of several
years to life.
The United States, Britain and Australia, where some of these
activists are now based, have criticized the national security laws
as a tool to silence dissent.
Hong Kong and Chinese authorities, however, say the laws are
necessary and have restored stability since mass pro-democracy
protests in 2019.
Hong Kong returned from British to Chinese rule in 1997 with the
promise that its freedoms, including freedom of speech, would be
protected under a "one country, two systems" formula. Critics of the
2020 law say those freedoms have eroded swiftly.
Law said on his Facebook that he had given up his Hong Kong passport
when applying for asylum to the United Kingdom in 2020 and that the
latest measures were "redundant".
Lau said he has never applied for or owned a Hong Kong passport,
while calling the moves "an explicit act of transnational
repression."
(Reporting by Farah Master and Jessie Pang; editing by James Pomfret
and Gerry Doyle)
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