Daily Dispatch

Hong Kong rebels in court battle

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FOUR rebel Hong Kong lawmakers were in court yesterday to fight a government bid to disqualify them from parliament, a move criticised as an attack on democracy under pressure from Beijing.

Hong Kong’s unpopular leader Leung Chun-ying and the justice department have brought the case against the pro-democracy legislator­s whom they accuse of failing to properly take their oaths of office during their swearing-in last October.

It comes as fears grow that Beijing is increasing­ly interferin­g in semi-autonomous Hong Kong, sparking calls by some activists for self-determinat­ion or even independen­ce for the city.

“What’s happening today would never happen in a democratic society,” said one of the four targeted lawmakers, Leung Kwok-hung as he entered Hong Kong’s High Court.

Two pro-independen­ce lawmakers have already been banned from office by the high court after they inserted expletives and draped themselves with “Hong Kong is not China” flags during the swearing-in.

That decision followed a special “interpreta­tion” of the city’s constituti­on by Beijing that effectivel­y prevented them from taking up their seats because of the way they took their oaths.

The four legislator­s in court yesterday are not staunchly proindepen­dence but two of them have advocated self-determinat­ion for Hong Kong.

All four altered their oaths during the swearing-in, which requires lawmakers to repeatedly describe Hong Kong as a “special administra­tive region of China”.

Unlike the pro-independen­ce activists, they were allowed to take up their seats. But the government is now seeking to remove them retrospect­ively.

Defence lawyer Martin Lee – himself a respected democracy campaigner – said there had been unorthodox readings of oaths in the past without disqualifi­cations, and that lawmakers “could not have imagined” that they could lose their seats.

Lee argued that the only justificat­ion for forcing them out of their seats would be if they had refused to take the pledge.

But prosecutor Johnny Mok questioned whether their oaths met requiremen­ts, including “solemnity and sincerity”.

Mok said lawmaker Nathan Law, who led massive pro-democracy rallies in 2014 and is the city’s youngest ever legislator, made an “invalid” oath.

Law quoted Gandhi before making the pledge, saying: “You will never imprison my mind”, and used intonation to make his oath sound like a question.

Legislator and former protest leader Lau Siu-lai read her pledge at a snail’s pace, which Mok said “cannot be said to be sincere”.

Veteran anti-China lawmaker Leung raised a yellow umbrella – a symbol of the democracy movement – during his pledge, which Mok said he turned into a “theatrical performanc­e”.

The fourth defendant, Edward Yiu, added lines to his oath, saying he would “fight for general universal suffrage”, which Mok described as a conscious decision to alter the pledge.

Hong Kong is governed under a semi-autonomous “one country, two systems” deal after being handed back to China by Britain in 1997. The framework is supposed to safeguard the city’s freedoms and way of life.

But there are growing concerns its liberties are disappeari­ng in a range of areas, from politics to media and education, as Beijing tightens its grip. — AFP

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? OPEN DEFIANCE: Pro-democracy protesters Raphael Wong, left, and Avery Ng, centre, hold signs that read ‘We Collude’ – a play on the slogan of Hong Kong leadership hopeful Carrie Lam’s ‘We Connect’, as they wait for her arrival to submit nomination...
Picture: AFP OPEN DEFIANCE: Pro-democracy protesters Raphael Wong, left, and Avery Ng, centre, hold signs that read ‘We Collude’ – a play on the slogan of Hong Kong leadership hopeful Carrie Lam’s ‘We Connect’, as they wait for her arrival to submit nomination...

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