The Borneo Post

Ex-opposition lawmaker jailed over folder grab

-

A former Hong Kong opposition lawmaker was jailed Tuesday for snatching a folder from an official during a legislatur­e meeting, the latest sign of Beijing’s tightening grip over the city’s once-boisterous chamber.

Previous Hong Kong legislatur­es had diverse political parties but after Beijing clamped down on dissent and imposed a sweeping national security law in 2020, authoritie­s changed the electoral rules to ensure that only “patriots” could run for office.

The traditiona­l pro-democracy camp no longer has any seats, with many of its members either in prison or in self-imposed exile.

Tuesday’s verdict against Leung Kwok-hung, a prominent pro-democracy figure nicknamed “Long Hair”, further shrinks the space for dissent in the legislatur­e -- already homogenous in perspectiv­e as it is now stacked with pro-Beijing loyalists.

The 66-year-old was charged with contempt after snatching a folder from an official during a legislatur­e meeting in 2016. His case has dragged on for years because of legal ambiguity over whether lawmakers can be charged over disruption­s.

On Tuesday, principal magistrate Ada Yim said Leung’s actions ran counter to a “secure and dignified” environmen­t for lawmakers to convene, and sentenced him to 14 days in jail.

“The defendant clearly knew he had no lawful or reasonable grounds to get the folder,” Yim said. Leung is already serving a 23month jail sentence for separately organising an unlawful protest, and faces the more serious charge of subversion under the national security law.

The sweeping law was brought in after Hong Kong was roiled by massive pro-democracy protests, and has ensnared nearly 170 journalist­s, activists and lawmakers.

Leung remained defiant in court Tuesday, arguing that his speech and expression as a lawmaker should be immune from prosecutio­n.

“What I did was to protest against government officials who disdained lawmakers’ attempts to hold them accountabl­e,” he told the court.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia