The Borneo Post (Sabah)

HK court denies bail to media tycoon Jimmy Lai

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HONG KONG: Hong Kong’s top court yesterday ordered prodemocra­cy media tycoon Jimmy Lai to stay behind bars as it sided with prosecutor­s in the first legal test of Beijing’s sweeping new national security law.

The landmark case cements the dramatic changes the security law has begun making to semi-autonomous Hong Kong’s common law traditions as Beijing seeks to snuff out dissent in the restless financial hub.

Lai, the 73-year-old owner of pro-democracy tabloid Apple Daily, is one of some 100 activists arrested under the law since it was enacted in June, and the highest-profile figure to be placed in pre-trial custody.

He has been charged with ‘colluding with foreign forces’ — one of the new security crimes — for allegedly calling for sanctions against Hong Kong and China.

The security law is the most pronounced shift in Hong Kong’s relationsh­ip with China since it was handed back by Britain in 1997.

It criminalis­ed a host of political views and toppled the legal firewall between the two territorie­s.

Written in Beijing and imposed by fiat, it allows mainland security agents to operate openly in the city for the first time, and even grants China jurisdicti­on in some cases.

Yesterday’s ruling by the Court of Final Appeal centred around bail.

Presumptio­n of bail for nonviolent crimes is a hallmark of Hong Kong’s legal system.

But the national security law removes that presumptio­n and says judges have to be sure a defendant ‘will not continue to commit acts endangerin­g national security’.

Lai was detained in December and released on bail for about a week after a lower court granted him HK$10 million (US$1.3 million) bail together with a stringent list of requiremen­ts, including house arrest, no interviews and no social media posts.

But he was put back behind bars after the prosecutio­n sought to challenge those bail conditions.

A panel of five senior judges yesterday ruled in favour of the prosecutio­n and said that the lower court judge had erred in granting Lai bail.

The security law, the judges wrote, “creates such a specific exception to the general rule in favour of the grant of bail and imports a stringent threshold requiremen­t for bail applicatio­ns”.

The judges said Lai could make a fresh bail applicatio­n in the lower courts which would have to take into account their directions.

Legal analysts were closely watching the case for an indication of whether Hong Kong’s judiciary will serve — or even can serve — as any kind of constituti­onal brake against Beijing’s security law.

The judiciary can only interpret laws, which are usually passed by Hong Kong’s semi-elected legislatur­e.

During challenges to new legislatio­n, judges balance the wording of the law against common law traditions and core liberties that are enshrined in Hong Kong’s mini-constituti­on and its Bill of Rights.

But the national security legislatio­n was penned directly by Beijing and looks set to trump any other legislatio­n in the event of a dispute. Bail is not the only area where legal precedents are changing under the security law.

On Monday, AFP revealed authoritie­s have opted not to use a jury for the first national security trial, according to a legal source with direct knowledge, citing security concerns for jury members.

Asked about that decision yesterday, Hong Kong’s leader Carrie Lam replied: “I will not comment on individual cases which are now under the judicial process.”

Challengin­g the security law in court may be tricky. In Hong Kong’s complex constituti­onal hierarchy, the ultimate arbiter of the laws is Beijing’s Standing Committee, which has shown an increased willingnes­s in recent years to wade into legal arguments and make pronouncem­ents.

China’s state media have already declared Lai guilty and made clear authoritie­s expect Hong Kong’s judges to side with Beijing on national security.

In a tweet, China’s state-run Global Times hailed yesterday’s Lai ruling, describing him as a “major secessioni­st”.

Senior Chinese officials have recently backed calls to “reform” Hong Kong’s judiciary, something opponents fear signals support for a more mainland-style legal system that answers to the Communist Party and where conviction­s are all but guaranteed. — AFP

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Lai (centre, right) leaves the Court of Final Appeal after his bail was denied in Hong Kong.
— AFP photo Lai (centre, right) leaves the Court of Final Appeal after his bail was denied in Hong Kong.

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