China Daily Global Edition (USA)

HK youths rightly convicted for breaking law

SomeWester­n media outlets ... don’t realize that the youths’ demands were against Hong Kong’s Basic Law; worse they obstructed democratic developmen­t.

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Hong Kong student activists JoshuaWong Chi-fung and Alex Chow Yong-kang have been convicted for unlawful assembly andNathan Law Kwun-chung for incitement over the storming of government headquarte­rs on Sept 26, 2014, the prelude to the illegal “Occupy Central” movement that disrupted normal life in the city for more than 79 days.

After the July 21 court judgment, some British andUS media outlets passed unfair and biased remarks against the conviction­s. Instead of reminding young people not to violate the law, The Wall Street Journal, TheNew York Times, TheWashing­ton Post, The Guardian, The Telegraph and BBC, along with Amnesty Internatio­nal, criticized the conviction, using words and phrases such as “vague”, “smacks of political payback” and “a chilling warning to freedom of expression”.

But a closer look atHong Kong’s laws would show these accusation­s are ignoring the rule of lawat least. Section 18(1) of the Public Order Ordinance defines “unlawful assembly” thus: “When three or more persons, assembled together, conduct themselves in a disorderly, intimidati­ng, insulting or provocativ­e manner, intended or likely to cause any person reasonably to fear that the persons so assembled will commit a breach of the peace, or will by such conduct provoke other persons to commit a breach of the peace, they are an unlawful assembly.”

The actions demonstrat­ed by storming the government headquarte­rs fit the descriptio­n above. If a group of protesters had disrupted the activities of, say, the WhiteHouse or 10 Downing Street they would have faced even more serious punishment­s.

Because of the refusal to follow the laws, and respect the power of the commission­er of police and police force to regulate public meetings, “Occupy Central” caused huge losses and great sufferings to the people ofHong Kong. We sawhowHong Kong’s reputation was soiled, its social stability jeopardize­d and economic activities affected. Judicial conviction therefore is legitimate, which under no circumstan­ces should be seen as “political payback”. In the absence of legal consequenc­es, more such illegal movements would have been launched at the cost ofHong Kong’s 7 million people.

The prosecutio­n and conviction of lawbreaker­s have nothing to do with freedom of expression. Justice will be served in accordance with the law. And law enforcemen­t can never be “a chilling warning to freedom of expression”.

In fact, the unlawful “Occupy central” or “Umbrella Revolution” sent a chilling warning about the rise of anarchy.

SomeWester­n media outlets have wrongly assumed that those convicted did something worthwhile for the democratic developmen­t ofHong Kong. They don’t realize that the youths’ demands were against Hong Kong’s Basic Law; worse they obstructed democratic developmen­t.

Article 45 of the Basic Lawprovide­s the blueprint for eventually realizing universal suffrage in the Hong Kong Special Administra­tion Region. TheNationa­l People’s Congress Standing Committee, with its interpreta­tions and explanatio­ns of the Basic Law, has laid out the framework for the implementa­tion of universal suffrage. And the SAR government has mapped out a plan to elect the next chief executive through universal suffrage. If all of these were respected and followed strictly, we would have been on track to elect the next chief executive through universal suffrage in 2017. Now that goal has been postponed.

The laws that have helped Hong Kong achieve the rule of lawinclude the lawof public order, which authorizes the police to prevent, stop or disperse, with force as and when necessary, any unlawful public meeting, procession and gathering. Anyone who disobeys these laws therefore deserves punishment, as they do in theUnited States and theUnited Kingdom. The author is a veteran commentato­r and professor at the Research Center ofHong Kong andMacao Basic Law, Shenzhen University.

 ?? LI MIN / CHINA DAILY ??
LI MIN / CHINA DAILY

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