Dubai Telegraph - Hong Kong sees first 'seditious publication' jailings since handover

EUR -
AED 3.964067
AFN 78.70899
ALL 99.128351
AMD 425.88288
ANG 1.945286
AOA 984.351116
ARS 1148.026546
AUD 1.703224
AWG 1.945497
AZN 1.837022
BAM 1.954836
BBD 2.179385
BDT 131.1441
BGN 1.956755
BHD 0.406805
BIF 3197.604334
BMD 1.079333
BND 1.438151
BOB 7.457976
BRL 6.222893
BSD 1.079338
BTN 93.963043
BWP 14.776164
BYN 3.53236
BYR 21154.919701
BZD 2.16815
CAD 1.54242
CDF 3104.160811
CHF 0.952905
CLF 0.02613
CLP 1002.711131
CNY 7.826352
CNH 7.820337
COP 4433.898476
CRC 544.216448
CUC 1.079333
CUP 28.602315
CVE 110.20962
CZK 25.048097
DJF 191.818848
DKK 7.459698
DOP 67.425494
DZD 144.178486
EGP 54.694428
ERN 16.18999
ETB 134.965479
FJD 2.473345
FKP 0.839344
GBP 0.837519
GEL 3.000232
GGP 0.839344
GHS 16.729973
GIP 0.839344
GMD 77.1751
GNF 9333.310033
GTQ 8.327353
GYD 225.820249
HKD 8.388562
HNL 27.599131
HRK 7.537514
HTG 141.727469
HUF 399.611524
IDR 17621.292578
ILS 3.892941
IMP 0.839344
INR 94.041443
IQD 1413.97638
IRR 45453.395826
ISK 146.907602
JEP 0.839344
JMD 169.206542
JOD 0.765679
JPY 159.600546
KES 139.395501
KGS 94.379438
KHR 4329.663897
KMF 498.651663
KPW 971.33128
KRW 1561.469553
KWD 0.33264
KYD 0.899486
KZT 536.160645
LAK 23386.814821
LBP 96710.219259
LKR 319.013785
LRD 215.877522
LSL 19.791538
LTL 3.186989
LVL 0.652878
LYD 5.211381
MAD 10.533407
MDL 19.697733
MGA 5021.337222
MKD 61.524295
MMK 2265.280096
MNT 3746.078696
MOP 8.640778
MRU 43.002391
MUR 48.840178
MVR 16.623183
MWK 1871.6075
MXN 21.890267
MYR 4.777667
MZN 68.980372
NAD 19.791172
NGN 1623.240641
NIO 39.720409
NOK 11.741734
NPR 150.340668
NZD 1.880392
OMR 0.415539
PAB 1.079338
PEN 3.94032
PGK 4.407601
PHP 61.884614
PKR 302.009145
PLN 4.175181
PYG 8533.790855
QAR 3.934123
RON 4.97467
RSD 117.149714
RUB 96.062465
RWF 1547.57933
SAR 4.049261
SBD 9.113321
SCR 15.341114
SDG 648.678967
SEK 10.972176
SGD 1.43786
SHP 0.848186
SLE 24.662875
SLL 22633.071834
SOS 616.872877
SRD 38.586102
STD 22340.006438
SVC 9.444254
SYP 14033.33586
SZL 19.784692
THB 36.406356
TJS 11.765061
TMT 3.777664
TND 3.348931
TOP 2.527905
TRY 39.407187
TTD 7.327182
TWD 35.482735
TZS 2844.04173
UAH 44.509634
UGX 3965.04431
USD 1.079333
UYU 45.986892
UZS 13943.993175
VES 69.431916
VND 27533.77559
VUV 134.682443
WST 3.072838
XAF 655.615406
XAG 0.033088
XAU 0.000371
XCD 2.91695
XDR 0.814154
XOF 655.627549
XPF 119.331742
YER 266.433391
ZAR 19.572294
ZMK 9715.287129
ZMW 31.112789
ZWL 347.544669
  • RIO

    0.1900

    63.94

    +0.3%

  • SCS

    0.0900

    11.52

    +0.78%

  • CMSC

    -0.1000

    23.2

    -0.43%

  • CMSD

    -0.1350

    23.37

    -0.58%

  • BCE

    0.7800

    24.49

    +3.18%

  • RBGPF

    1.5800

    66.43

    +2.38%

  • BTI

    0.4800

    40.16

    +1.2%

  • NGG

    -1.4500

    59.44

    -2.44%

  • RYCEF

    -0.3300

    10.3

    -3.2%

  • BCC

    0.4700

    100.79

    +0.47%

  • VOD

    -0.0200

    9.01

    -0.22%

  • JRI

    -0.1700

    12.71

    -1.34%

  • RELX

    -1.3000

    47.24

    -2.75%

  • GSK

    0.4900

    39.3

    +1.25%

  • BP

    -0.1700

    31.71

    -0.54%

  • AZN

    -0.4900

    77.47

    -0.63%

Hong Kong sees first 'seditious publication' jailings since handover
Hong Kong sees first 'seditious publication' jailings since handover

Hong Kong sees first 'seditious publication' jailings since handover

Hong Kong's courts jailed two people for publishing seditious content on Monday, the first time the colonial-era law has been used to secure a conviction for printed content since the city's 1997 handover to China.

Text size:

Sedition is a throwback to Hong Kong's British colonial past but has been dusted off as authorities carry out a widespread crackdown on dissent in the wake of 2019's democracy protests.

Multiple people -- including journalists, union members and a prominent radio DJ -- have been detained under the law and are facing upcoming trials.

A woman last year was jailed for "conspiracy to commit a seditious act" over a pro-democracy chat group she ran which revealed personal details about police officers.

But Monday's verdicts were the first seditious publication convictions since the return to Chinese rule.

Kim Chiang Chung-sang, 41, a former property manager, was given eight months in jail for putting up posters outside a kindergarten and the city's High Court.

The posters criticised the judiciary for convicting a man last year at the first trial under a national security law that Beijing imposed on Hong Kong to neuter dissent.

Acting Chief Magistrate Peter Law said Chiang was "challenging the rule of law" and trying to "poison children quietly".

In a separate case that also concluded on Monday, the District Court jailed former clerk Chloe Tso Suet-sum, 45, for over a year for asking a 17-year-old to design and print protests leaflets.

Prosecutors said the leaflets contained slogans urging Hong Kong people to build their own army and nation, and also carried black bauhinia flowers, a symbol of the city's now crushed democracy movement.

The 17-year-old, who AFP has chosen not to name, was sent to a youth rehabilitation centre, a step short of a custodial sentence where juveniles usually stay for two to five months.

The defendants in both cases pleaded guilty, which normally results in a sentence reduction.

Sedition carries up to two years in jail for a first offence.

During colonial rule it was deployed against pro-Beijing media and leftist government critics who slammed it as a tool to suppress free speech.

Now Chinese state media and Hong Kong's pro-Beijing press have embraced its use against the current government's critics.

Police and prosecutors now regularly use sedition alongside the national security law to clamp down on political speech and views.

It is treated like a national security crime which means those arrested are usually denied bail.

In recent months sedition charges have been brought against pro-democracy unionists who produced euphemistic children's books about a sheep village defending itself from invading wolves, as well as journalists from now shuttered pro-democracy news outlets Apple Daily and StandNews.

Ming Pao, a Chinese mainstream newspaper in Hong Kong, recently adding a disclaimer to its columns saying it had no intention of committing sedition when criticising government policy.

Y.Chaudhry--DT