Hong Kong Waiter Charged with Inciting Subversion Under National Security Law
HONG KONG, JUL 8 – Amnesty International finds over 80% of convictions under Hong Kong's National Security Law involve peaceful expression and lack evidence of violence, raising concerns over legal fairness.
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Hong Kong waiter charged with inciting subversion under Beijing-imposed nat. security law
A Hong Kong waiter has become the latest person charged with inciting subversion under the Beijing-imposed national security law. West Kowloon Law Courts Building. File photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP. Chan Ho-hin, 22, appeared at the West Kowloon Magistrates’ Courts on Wednesday to face the charge, according to local media reports. He was already charged on April 30 with one count of “knowingly publishing articles with seditious intent” under the Safeguar…
80 Percent of Convictions Under Hong Kong’s National Security Law Not Justified: Amnesty International Report - The Thinking Conservative
Years after implementation of CCP’s Hong Kong National Security Law, Amnesty International report said 80% of convictions made weren't justified. The post 80 Percent of Convictions Under Hong Kong’s National Security Law Not Justified: Amnesty International Report appeared first on The Thinking Conservative.
80 Percent of Convictions Under Hong Kong’s National Security Law Not Justified: Amnesty International Report
Five years after the implementation of the Chinese Communist Party’s Hong Kong National Security Law, Amnesty International’s latest research report said that more than 80 percent of convictions made under the law were not justified, and should not have been prosecuted in the first place. “This research demonstrates that the vast majority of those charged with national security offences have acted entirely within their rights,” Amnesty Internati…
The National Security Law for Hong Kong was passed by the Chinese Communist Party on June 30, 2020, and it has been in effect for five years. Many Hong Kong residents said on the 8th that nearly 400,000 people have left Hong Kong, and "Hong Kong is finished." Many Hong Kong residents can only adopt a "soft resistance" by not spending money in Hong Kong and refusing to vote. Many people who have participated in the protests described the current …
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