🤬 Al Jazeera [excerpt]: #HongKong’s largest-ever state security trial has entered its closing phase, with pro-#democracy #activists linked to massive street #protests in 2019 charged under a contentious #China-imposed #nationalsecurity #law (NSL). The trial of the 16 activists, accused of conspiracy to commit subversion, began closing arguments on Wednesday. If convicted, they face life in prison. The defendants are among 47 opposition activists, including elected #lawmakers, #unionists, and #academics, who were rounded up by police in 2021, accused of plotting to sew a constitutional crisis and subvert the government. The case has become a bellwether of Hong Kong’s political environment and is widely considered part of Beijing’s crackdown on the city’s once-vibrant pro-democracy movement. The #law, which criminalises secession, subversion, and collusion with foreign forces to intervene in the city’s affairs, as well as terrorism, has been criticised as eroding the autonomy promised when the island returned to China in 1997. It has helped to put many pro-democracy politicians and activists in jail or exile. What are the charges? Throughout a 100-day trial, prosecutors have outlined what they say was a plan by the activists to subvert the government. They claim the activists aimed to organise an unofficial primary vote that would consolidate their power in the legislature. Then, they would seek to “indiscriminately veto” government budgets to exert pressure for their demands, prosecutors say, with an ultimate aim to subvert state power or force Hong Kong’s leader to resign. One of the activists’ key demands was an independent inquiry into alleged #policebrutality against thousands of Hong Kong protesters who took to the streets in 2019, in a crackdown watchdogs have decried as “brutal” and “unlawful”. Prosecutor Jonathan Man argued the defendants’ acts clearly amounted to subversion even though there had been no actual violence. “We are talking about a conspiracy to have #legislators vetoing the budget indiscriminately,” Man said during closing arguments. ‘Right to fair trial’ Rights campaigners and experts have expressed concerns about the activists’ arrest and trial. In October, a group of #UnitedNations #humanrights experts said they were troubled by “the use of mass trials in NSL cases”, warning they could “negatively affect safeguards that ensure #dueprocess and the right to fair trial”. #news
共產不勝寒
Funny quote by the group of UN human rights “experts.” As if HK people haven’t already lost their right to a free trial…. In one fell swoop, China instilled vague, retroactive laws over HK that guaranteed the loss of most basic freedoms, just like in the mainland.