Bangkok Post

West seeks info about detainees

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GENEVA: Western diplomats and legal experts have urged China to clarify the status of 12 Hong Kong residents arrested at sea last month and whether they have seen lawyers of their choice.

The 12 were arrested on Aug 23 for illegal entry into mainland Chinese waters after setting off from Hong Kong in a boat bound for self-ruled Taiwan.

All were suspected of committing crimes in Hong Kong related to the anti-government protests that erupted last year. Ten had been charged there, released on bail and forbidden from leaving the former British colony, and all are now being detained in the neighbouri­ng mainland city of Shenzhen.

A senior Chinese official, speaking at an event organised by its mission to the UN in Geneva, said the 12 were entitled to access to lawyers and the presumptio­n of innocence, but did not say whether they had seen lawyers of their choice.

“I believe that the law enforcemen­t bodies and judicial bodies in the mainland of China will strictly follow the criminal procedure law and the relevant regulation­s and have a fair trial in the case,” Xi Junjian, deputy director of the law department of China’s Hong Kong and Macao Affairs Office, said in response to a question.

Western envoys and academics voiced concerns during a separate event organised by Britain’s mission that focused on Beijing’s imposition of a new national security law on Hong Kong.

“Twelve Hong Kong democracy activists arrested in August off the coast have been denied access to lawyers of their choice. Local authoritie­s have yet to provide informatio­n about their welfare or the charges against them,” said Mark Cassayre, deputy US ambassador.

Steve Tsang of the School of Oriental and African Studies, University in London, agreed.

“None of them has been accorded the normal legal rights that they would expect to enjoy as Hong Kong citizens,” he said.

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