The Borneo Post

Extraditio­n row sparks parliament scuffles

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Anger over Hong Kong’s controvers­ial plans to allow extraditio­ns to Chinese mainland boiled over in city’s legislatur­e

HONG KONG: Anger over Hong Kong’s controvers­ial plans to allow extraditio­ns to the Chinese mainland boiled over in the city’s legislatur­e yesterday as rival lawmakers scuffled with each other in chaotic scenes.

The legislativ­e meeting on the government’s disputed extraditio­n bill was originally chaired by pro-democracy lawmaker James To, but the pro-Beijing camp earlier this week forcibly unseated To and replaced him with their choice of chairman, Abraham Shek.

Rancour between the two political camps exploded with rival lawmakers shouting and tussling amidst a dense pack of reporters, as pro-democracy lawmakers tried to seize the microphone and stop their counterpar­ts in the legislatur­e from controllin­g the meeting.

Pro-democracy lawmaker Gary Fan collapsed and was carried out from the chamber on a stretcher, while others from the proBeijing camp claimed they were wounded.

“We couldn’t possibly agree to the suggestion that our meeting chaired by James To should be suspended in any way, because it is completely constituti­onal and legal,” pro-democracy lawmaker Claudia Mo said after the meeting.

But pro-Beijing lawmaker Shek insisted it is “legal” for him to host the meeting.

Hong Kong’s government is pushing a bill through the city’s legislatur­e which would allow case-by-case extraditio­ns to any jurisdicti­ons it doesn’t have an already agreed treaty with, including mainland China, Macau

We couldn’t possibly agree to the suggestion that our meeting chaired by James To should be suspended in any way, because it is completely constituti­onal and legal. — Claudia Mo, pro-democracy lawmaker

and Taiwan.

The plan has sparked huge protests and mounting alarm within the city’s business and legal communitie­s – as well as foreign government­s – who fear it will hammer the semi-autonomous financial hub’s internatio­nal appeal and tangle people up in China’s court system.

Historical­ly Hong Kong has baulked at mainland extraditio­ns because of the opacity of China’s criminal justice system and its liberal use of the death penalty.

Tens of thousands of people hit the streets last month to protest against the bill.

But Hong Kong’s pro-Beijing government has argued the bill must be passed quickly to stop 20-year-old resident Chan Tong-kai evading justice for the murder of his girlfriend during a Valentine’s holiday in Taipei last year.

Chan admitted to Hong Kong police that he killed his pregnant girlfriend Poon Hiu-wing, also from Hong Kong, and then flew home. Police were unable to charge him for murder or extradite him to Taiwan because no agreement is in place.

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 ??  ?? eong hong pro-democracy lawmakers scuffle with pro-Beijing lawmaker Abraham phek (top centreF in an attempt to seize microphone­s from him as scuffles break out between lawmakers in the iegislativ­e Council (iegCoF in eong hongK — Acm photo
eong hong pro-democracy lawmakers scuffle with pro-Beijing lawmaker Abraham phek (top centreF in an attempt to seize microphone­s from him as scuffles break out between lawmakers in the iegislativ­e Council (iegCoF in eong hongK — Acm photo
 ??  ?? mro-democracy lawmakers clash with pro-Beijing lawmakers during a meeting for control of a meeting room to consider the controvers­ial extraditio­n bill, in eong hong, ChinaK — oeuters photo
mro-democracy lawmakers clash with pro-Beijing lawmakers during a meeting for control of a meeting room to consider the controvers­ial extraditio­n bill, in eong hong, ChinaK — oeuters photo
 ??  ?? can is carried away on a stretcher after clashes with pro-Beijing lawmakersK — oeuters photo
can is carried away on a stretcher after clashes with pro-Beijing lawmakersK — oeuters photo

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