China Daily (Hong Kong)

Court rejects appeal by activist Edward Leung

- By CHEN ZIMO in Hong Kong mollychen@chinadaily­hk.com

The Court of Appeal of Hong Kong on Wednesday dismissed the appeal lodged by local independen­ce activist Edward Leung Tin-kei against his six-year jail term for rioting in 2016, saying the sentence handed down to him by the Court of First Instance was “reasonable” and supported by “sufficient evidence”.

The court also ruled against Lo Kin-man and Wong Ka-kui, who were also convicted of rioting and jailed for the same incident on Feb 8 and 9, 2016. They filed the appeal together with Leung.

In the written summary of the ruling, the court said sentencing for the offense of rioting “must reflect the law’s determinat­ion to maintain public order, and send a clear message to society and the public that the law does not condone breaches of public order by means of violence”.

Meanwhile, the court said in a summary that it also took into considerat­ion various factors when sentencing rioting offenders. This included whether the riot was premeditat­ed and the number of participan­ts in the riot and the degree of violence involved. The offenders’ personal beliefs, however, were not a mitigating factor.

The court dismissed the appeals, arguing that the riot in which the trio participat­ed was premeditat­ed, the same view found by the trial judge. Participan­ts in the riots showed a degree of premeditat­ion in committing the crime when they attacked unarmed police officers with serious violence, the court said.

Participan­ts in the riots showed a degree of premeditat­ion in committing the crime when they attacked unarmed police officers with serious violence.” The Court of Appeal

Chief Judge of the High Court of Hong Kong Jeremy Poon Shiuchor, one of the three judges who presided over the appeal case, further noted that Leung had been present since the riot began and had witnessed how the events unfolded with escalating violence.

According to evidence presented by the prosecutio­n, Leung and his accomplice­s attacked traffic police officers with wooden sticks. They then took turns, using a bullhorn, to encourage people to charge the police cordon. Masked protesters were then seen tossing bricks at police and setting trash cans on fire. The court also said in the written summary that even if Leung claimed his aim had been to protect local traditions and culture, this could not “lessen his culpabilit­y for rioting and unjustifie­d use of serious violence towards a police officer”.

The Mong Kok riot, which began around 9:30 pm on Feb 8, 2016, saw clashes between radicals and the police on Portland Street of Mong Kok.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China