#Newspaper
The Hong Kong High Courtās recent ruling that the anti-mask law is incompatible with the Basic Law has infuriated Beijing who claimed that the compliance of Hong Kongās laws with the Basic Law governing relations between Hong Kong and China could only be judged and decided by Chinaās National Peopleās Congress. Chris Patten, the last British governor of Hong Kong, called on the British government to speak out to express its concern at the Chinese remarks. Patten said in a letter to the foreign secretary, Dominic Raab: āThe Chinese statement was in complete breach of the Sino-British joint declaration, which states that: āThe Hong Kong special administrative region will be vested with executive, legislative and independent judicial power, including that of final adjudication.āā He warns if the rule of law and autonomy are threatened, Hong Kongās viability to remain a thriving financial and trading centre will be at risk.
Full Article: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/nov/21/china-threatening-autonomy-of-hong-kong-says-chris-patten
#ChrisPattern #RuleOfLaw #SinoBritishJointDeclaration
The Hong Kong High Courtās recent ruling that the anti-mask law is incompatible with the Basic Law has infuriated Beijing who claimed that the compliance of Hong Kongās laws with the Basic Law governing relations between Hong Kong and China could only be judged and decided by Chinaās National Peopleās Congress. Chris Patten, the last British governor of Hong Kong, called on the British government to speak out to express its concern at the Chinese remarks. Patten said in a letter to the foreign secretary, Dominic Raab: āThe Chinese statement was in complete breach of the Sino-British joint declaration, which states that: āThe Hong Kong special administrative region will be vested with executive, legislative and independent judicial power, including that of final adjudication.āā He warns if the rule of law and autonomy are threatened, Hong Kongās viability to remain a thriving financial and trading centre will be at risk.
Full Article: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/nov/21/china-threatening-autonomy-of-hong-kong-says-chris-patten
#ChrisPattern #RuleOfLaw #SinoBritishJointDeclaration
the Guardian
China threatening autonomy of Hong Kong, says Chris Patten
Last British governor of region urges Foreign Office to object to Chinese remarks
#Interview #LiYi #LeeYee
83-year-old Li Yi: I donāt have long to live, but I believe Hong Kong young people have wisdom beyond imagination 1/6
Li Yi is 83 years old. According to him, he takes several medicines a day, for diabetes, for whatever ... and sleeping pills. He often said that he couldn't sleep well since he was young, but he still wrote five newspaper columns a week and did "one-minute reading" for RTHK. Li Yi reads all kinds of news online, and he is no less enthusiastic than younger people. There is a Thai helper who cooks and serves him. Other than that, his home is only a house full of books.
Li Yi's family is all in foreign countries and his late wife was buried in Canada, but he is still struggling in Hong Kong alone. Li Yi said that at this stage, he probably should be with family and write his own autobiography. "Of course I can still write if I leave Hong Kong." However, Li Yi cannot not let go of Hong Kong and leave. He states that ever since Hong Kongās future problems in 1981, he has been "love Hong Kong" and since then "the feelings for China have been very weak."
Continue reading:
https://telegra.ph/83-year-old-Li-Yi-I-dont-have-long-to-live-but-I-believe-Hong-Kong-young-people-have-wisdom-beyond-imagination-16-03-07
To be continued
Source: Stand News, (25-Feb)
https://bit.ly/3aARccx
#BasicLaw #TiananmenMassacre #Democracy #SinoBritishJointDeclaration #OneCountryTwoSystems #SARS
83-year-old Li Yi: I donāt have long to live, but I believe Hong Kong young people have wisdom beyond imagination 1/6
Li Yi is 83 years old. According to him, he takes several medicines a day, for diabetes, for whatever ... and sleeping pills. He often said that he couldn't sleep well since he was young, but he still wrote five newspaper columns a week and did "one-minute reading" for RTHK. Li Yi reads all kinds of news online, and he is no less enthusiastic than younger people. There is a Thai helper who cooks and serves him. Other than that, his home is only a house full of books.
Li Yi's family is all in foreign countries and his late wife was buried in Canada, but he is still struggling in Hong Kong alone. Li Yi said that at this stage, he probably should be with family and write his own autobiography. "Of course I can still write if I leave Hong Kong." However, Li Yi cannot not let go of Hong Kong and leave. He states that ever since Hong Kongās future problems in 1981, he has been "love Hong Kong" and since then "the feelings for China have been very weak."
Continue reading:
https://telegra.ph/83-year-old-Li-Yi-I-dont-have-long-to-live-but-I-believe-Hong-Kong-young-people-have-wisdom-beyond-imagination-16-03-07
To be continued
Source: Stand News, (25-Feb)
https://bit.ly/3aARccx
#BasicLaw #TiananmenMassacre #Democracy #SinoBritishJointDeclaration #OneCountryTwoSystems #SARS
Telegraph
83-year-old Li Yi: I donāt have long to live, but I believe Hong Kong young people have wisdom beyond imagination 1/6
Li Yi is 83 years old. According to him, he takes several medicines a day, for diabetes, for whatever ... and sleeping pills. He often said that he couldn't sleep well since he was young, but he still wrote five newspaper columns a week and did "one-minuteā¦
#Newspaper
UK parliamentarians launch probe into Hong Kong police over rights violations
//A cross-party parliamentary group in the United Kingdom has launched an inquiry into possible violations of rights and humanitarian principles against medical workers and activists by the Hong Kong police.
//The findings and recommendations will be presented to Downing Street as evidence of whether or not police actions have violated rights guaranteed under international law.
//it will look into whether police actions have constituted a breach of the Sino-British Joint Declaration and Basic Law.
//āThis inquiry marks an important shift in the British governmentās approach to addressing human rights abuses in Hong Kong and to defending the cityās rights and freedoms that are guaranteed under the Basic Law and the Sino-British Joint Declaration.ā
Full Article: HKFP, (11-Mar)
https://bit.ly/3d5dUM4
#UK #PoliceBrutality #SinoBritishJointDeclaration #BasicLaw
UK parliamentarians launch probe into Hong Kong police over rights violations
//A cross-party parliamentary group in the United Kingdom has launched an inquiry into possible violations of rights and humanitarian principles against medical workers and activists by the Hong Kong police.
//The findings and recommendations will be presented to Downing Street as evidence of whether or not police actions have violated rights guaranteed under international law.
//it will look into whether police actions have constituted a breach of the Sino-British Joint Declaration and Basic Law.
//āThis inquiry marks an important shift in the British governmentās approach to addressing human rights abuses in Hong Kong and to defending the cityās rights and freedoms that are guaranteed under the Basic Law and the Sino-British Joint Declaration.ā
Full Article: HKFP, (11-Mar)
https://bit.ly/3d5dUM4
#UK #PoliceBrutality #SinoBritishJointDeclaration #BasicLaw
Hong Kong Free Press HKFP
UK parliamentarians launch probe into Hong Kong police over rights violations
A cross-party parliamentary group in the United Kingdom has launched an inquiry into possible violations of rights and humanitarian principles against medical workers and activists by the Hong Kong police. The inquiry from an All-Party Parliamentary Groupā¦
Why should Britain help Hong Kong people put on face masks
It is more than preventing the spread of COVID-19.
When in October last year Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam announced a sweeping ban on face masks at protests, Hong Kong people responded by filling streets with their faces wearing paint, cartoon masks, and even paper bags.
Lam's Prohibition of Face Covering Regulation was introduced through an oppressive colonial-era emergency law ļ¼ the Emergency Regulations Ordinance (Cap. 241), enacted in 1922.
Authorities are empowered by that law to censor the media; seize property; take control of all transportation, manufacturing and trade in the city; and detain people for lengthy periods of time.
Legal experts argue that the original emergency laws such as Cap. 241 were inconsistent with the Basic Law, which is the de facto constitution of Hong Kong.
As a treaty between the PRC and Britain, the Sino-British Joint Declaration provides that the basic policies of the PRC regarding Hong Kong after 1997 will be stipulated in the Basic Law, and will remain unchanged for 50 years.
The above-stated basic policies include that Hong Kong will enjoy a high degree of autonomy; the then life-style will remain unchanged; and rights and freedoms of the person, of speech, of the press, of assembly, of association, of travel, of movement, of correspondence, of strike, etc. will be ensured by law in Hong Kong.
Constitutional critics worry that Lam has set an abysmal example in that the leader may arbitrarily pass legal regulations without consultation, and she may even extend the restriction to a curfew or martial law. Is it justifiable for Lam to invoke the emergency ordinance without public consultation or voting by the legislature?
The purpose of the Emergency Regulations Ordinance was to put Hong Kong under tight colonial control by the British empire. Given Hong Kong is not a colony anymore, its use by Carrie Lam becomes more questionable.
The colonial-era Emergency Regulations Ordinance grants extensive powers to the Chief Executive to pass measures on ambiguous grounds such as 'public emergency' and 'serious public disorder.' Neither of these terms are clearly defined, and they could be interpreted broadly or even arbitrarily. Further, it raises the question of why Lam invoked the emergency law to ban wearing masks in protests while insisting that Hong Kong was not under a state of emergency?
When the Basic Law, being part and parcel of the Joint Declaration, is contravened under the influence of the Chinese government, the British government should put it right.
British politician Paddy Ashdown emphasized that the UK must denounce the abuse of colonial laws. He also considered that colonial-era laws could be tools of the armoury of authoritarian regimes.
Likewise, Chris Patten, Britainās last colonial governor of Hong Kong, stated that āI hope we can ā¦ count on the British government to call out China for its breaches of the [Sino-British] Joint Declaration and to watch carefully for future attempts by Beijing to undermine the rule of law and to corrupt the electoral process in the months ahead.ā
āBritain has the right to raise any breaches with China after 1997. We would not hesitate to do soā, the then British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher stated in 1984.
Thus, Britain should and can rectify Hong Kong's situation by exercising its rights as a party to the treaty Sino-British Joint Declaration.
It is about commitment, commitment of the former sovereign state of Hong Kong.
#HongKong #UK
#SinoBritishJointDeclaration
#BasicLaw #China
Source:
http://www.mjilonline.org/china-uk-and-their-sino-british-joint-declaration/
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/apr/30/chris-patten-urges-uk-investigate-coronavirus-origins-china
https://www.elegislation.gov.hk/hk/cap241
https://edition.cnn.com/2019/10/04/asia/hong-kong-face-mask-ban-meeting-intl-hnk/index.html
https://www.sbs.com.au/news/britain-warns-china-if-hong-kong-agreement-not-honoured-as-beijing-condemns-violence
It is more than preventing the spread of COVID-19.
When in October last year Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam announced a sweeping ban on face masks at protests, Hong Kong people responded by filling streets with their faces wearing paint, cartoon masks, and even paper bags.
Lam's Prohibition of Face Covering Regulation was introduced through an oppressive colonial-era emergency law ļ¼ the Emergency Regulations Ordinance (Cap. 241), enacted in 1922.
Authorities are empowered by that law to censor the media; seize property; take control of all transportation, manufacturing and trade in the city; and detain people for lengthy periods of time.
Legal experts argue that the original emergency laws such as Cap. 241 were inconsistent with the Basic Law, which is the de facto constitution of Hong Kong.
As a treaty between the PRC and Britain, the Sino-British Joint Declaration provides that the basic policies of the PRC regarding Hong Kong after 1997 will be stipulated in the Basic Law, and will remain unchanged for 50 years.
The above-stated basic policies include that Hong Kong will enjoy a high degree of autonomy; the then life-style will remain unchanged; and rights and freedoms of the person, of speech, of the press, of assembly, of association, of travel, of movement, of correspondence, of strike, etc. will be ensured by law in Hong Kong.
Constitutional critics worry that Lam has set an abysmal example in that the leader may arbitrarily pass legal regulations without consultation, and she may even extend the restriction to a curfew or martial law. Is it justifiable for Lam to invoke the emergency ordinance without public consultation or voting by the legislature?
The purpose of the Emergency Regulations Ordinance was to put Hong Kong under tight colonial control by the British empire. Given Hong Kong is not a colony anymore, its use by Carrie Lam becomes more questionable.
The colonial-era Emergency Regulations Ordinance grants extensive powers to the Chief Executive to pass measures on ambiguous grounds such as 'public emergency' and 'serious public disorder.' Neither of these terms are clearly defined, and they could be interpreted broadly or even arbitrarily. Further, it raises the question of why Lam invoked the emergency law to ban wearing masks in protests while insisting that Hong Kong was not under a state of emergency?
When the Basic Law, being part and parcel of the Joint Declaration, is contravened under the influence of the Chinese government, the British government should put it right.
British politician Paddy Ashdown emphasized that the UK must denounce the abuse of colonial laws. He also considered that colonial-era laws could be tools of the armoury of authoritarian regimes.
Likewise, Chris Patten, Britainās last colonial governor of Hong Kong, stated that āI hope we can ā¦ count on the British government to call out China for its breaches of the [Sino-British] Joint Declaration and to watch carefully for future attempts by Beijing to undermine the rule of law and to corrupt the electoral process in the months ahead.ā
āBritain has the right to raise any breaches with China after 1997. We would not hesitate to do soā, the then British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher stated in 1984.
Thus, Britain should and can rectify Hong Kong's situation by exercising its rights as a party to the treaty Sino-British Joint Declaration.
It is about commitment, commitment of the former sovereign state of Hong Kong.
#HongKong #UK
#SinoBritishJointDeclaration
#BasicLaw #China
Source:
http://www.mjilonline.org/china-uk-and-their-sino-british-joint-declaration/
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/apr/30/chris-patten-urges-uk-investigate-coronavirus-origins-china
https://www.elegislation.gov.hk/hk/cap241
https://edition.cnn.com/2019/10/04/asia/hong-kong-face-mask-ban-meeting-intl-hnk/index.html
https://www.sbs.com.au/news/britain-warns-china-if-hong-kong-agreement-not-honoured-as-beijing-condemns-violence
The Michigan Journal of International Law
China, UK, and Their Sino-British Joint Declaration ā The Michigan Journal of International Law
Kay Li Vol. 41 Associate Editor This is the sixth month of the ongoing series of protests in Hong Kong, [ā¦]
#Newspaper
[Hong Kong's National Security Law] CY Leung: Hong Kong may set up intelligence agency like "Special Branch". Wu Chi-wai: Like Germany's "Gestapo"
(24 May)In an interview with Reuters, former Chief Executive CY Leung mentioned that the Central Government may set up a local intelligence agency in Hong Kong similar to the Special Branch of its colonial era. It may authorise Hong Kong law enforcement bodies to enforce "Hong Kong's National Security Law". He added that Hong Kong had a Special Branch to deal with national security threats during the British colonial period, which was dismantled in 1997 before the Handover.
Albert Ho questioned whether the "secret police" would command Hong Kong police
In response, Democratic Party Chairman Wu Chi-wai lambasted Leung for "spewing nonsense". Leung took the example of similar national security agencies in other countries to support the establishment of a national security agency in Hong Kong. Regarding this, Wu stressed that the political power of the countries mentioned came from election by its people. "It is not for the rule of man to decide who is right or wrong." He emphasised that the Central Government's establishment of law enforcement units in Hong Kong was equivalent to creating the Eastern Depot from the Ming Dynasty or the Gestapo, Nazi Germany's secret police, in Hong Kong, i.e. the establishment of an arbitrary Central Government Secret Service in Hong Kong.
Wu continued his criticism, the Chinese government's implementation of "Hong Kong's National Security Law" meant applying the rule of man approach from the Mainland to Hong Kong. It would be like opening the " 'front door' to the legal system between Hong Kong and China" so that "secret police" could enforce the law across the border. This would undermine "one country, two systems" both "in form and in name" and allow the arbitrary conviction of Hongkongers.
Albert Ho, Chairman of the Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements of China, slammed the Chinese government for blatantly violating the Sino-British Joint Declaration and reneging on its promise that Hong Kong shall remain unchanged for 50 years, "shocking the whole world". If Hong Kong were to set up something akin to the colonial era's Special Branch, which side of the law would that "secret police" enforce? Would the enforcement agency be responsible for commanding the Hong Kong Police Force? So far, the details are vague. Ho said the current situation "may not have reached its worst". He questioned the government, "Under what circumstances should Hong Kong's (international) status be preserved?"
Source: Apple Daily News
https://bit.ly/3gprkEb
#China #NationalSecurityLaw #OneCountryOneSystem #Gestapo #SinoBritishJointDeclaration
[Hong Kong's National Security Law] CY Leung: Hong Kong may set up intelligence agency like "Special Branch". Wu Chi-wai: Like Germany's "Gestapo"
(24 May)In an interview with Reuters, former Chief Executive CY Leung mentioned that the Central Government may set up a local intelligence agency in Hong Kong similar to the Special Branch of its colonial era. It may authorise Hong Kong law enforcement bodies to enforce "Hong Kong's National Security Law". He added that Hong Kong had a Special Branch to deal with national security threats during the British colonial period, which was dismantled in 1997 before the Handover.
Albert Ho questioned whether the "secret police" would command Hong Kong police
In response, Democratic Party Chairman Wu Chi-wai lambasted Leung for "spewing nonsense". Leung took the example of similar national security agencies in other countries to support the establishment of a national security agency in Hong Kong. Regarding this, Wu stressed that the political power of the countries mentioned came from election by its people. "It is not for the rule of man to decide who is right or wrong." He emphasised that the Central Government's establishment of law enforcement units in Hong Kong was equivalent to creating the Eastern Depot from the Ming Dynasty or the Gestapo, Nazi Germany's secret police, in Hong Kong, i.e. the establishment of an arbitrary Central Government Secret Service in Hong Kong.
Wu continued his criticism, the Chinese government's implementation of "Hong Kong's National Security Law" meant applying the rule of man approach from the Mainland to Hong Kong. It would be like opening the " 'front door' to the legal system between Hong Kong and China" so that "secret police" could enforce the law across the border. This would undermine "one country, two systems" both "in form and in name" and allow the arbitrary conviction of Hongkongers.
Albert Ho, Chairman of the Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements of China, slammed the Chinese government for blatantly violating the Sino-British Joint Declaration and reneging on its promise that Hong Kong shall remain unchanged for 50 years, "shocking the whole world". If Hong Kong were to set up something akin to the colonial era's Special Branch, which side of the law would that "secret police" enforce? Would the enforcement agency be responsible for commanding the Hong Kong Police Force? So far, the details are vague. Ho said the current situation "may not have reached its worst". He questioned the government, "Under what circumstances should Hong Kong's (international) status be preserved?"
Source: Apple Daily News
https://bit.ly/3gprkEb
#China #NationalSecurityLaw #OneCountryOneSystem #Gestapo #SinoBritishJointDeclaration
#1Country1System
All Dead
Including the Joint Declaration
Photo from Facebook
#May28 #SinoBritishJointDeclaration #AllDead
All Dead
Including the Joint Declaration
Photo from Facebook
#May28 #SinoBritishJointDeclaration #AllDead
#Newspaper
Hong Kong: Boris Johnson urged to form alliance over China security law
//Seven former UK foreign secretaries have urged Boris Johnson to form a global alliance to co-ordinate the response to the China-Hong Kong crisis.
//The former British colony enjoys some freedoms not seen in mainland China - and these are set out in a mini-constitution called the Basic Law.
//In their letter to the prime minister, the cross-party group of former cabinet ministers says the UK government must be seen to lead the international response, as many countries take their cue from Britain over its former colony.
//Jeremy Hunt, David Miliband, Jack Straw, William Hague, Malcolm Rifkind, David Owen and Margaret Beckett all expressed their concern at what they call China's "flagrant breach" of Sino-British agreements by imposing tough national security laws on Hong Kong.
// They urged Mr Johnson to set up an "international contact group" of allies to coordinate any joint action.
//A Downing Street spokesman insisted the government was already playing a leading role with international partners in urging China to think again.
//Mr Raab said the new security legislation "very clearly violates" the autonomy that is guaranteed under Chinese law as well as that in the 1997 agreement. He confirmed the UK will allow those who hold British National (Overseas) (BNO) passports to come to the UK and apply to study and work for an extendable 12-month period.This will in turn "provide a path to citizenship
//Mr Raab said up to three million people registered as a British national (overseas) in Hong Kong could be eligible for UK citizenship if China presses ahead with the law.
//the chairman of Commons foreign affairs committee, Tom Tugendhat, said the government must realise that China has a "very, very authoritarian system of government" and should rethink the partnership between the two.
Full Article: BBC News, (01-Jun)
https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-52872131
Further reading:
Seven former foreign secretaries urge UK to take lead on Hong Kong
https://bit.ly/2U9lhtS
#HongKong #NationalSecurityLaw #BNO #SinoBritishJointDeclaration #Britishcolony #China
Hong Kong: Boris Johnson urged to form alliance over China security law
//Seven former UK foreign secretaries have urged Boris Johnson to form a global alliance to co-ordinate the response to the China-Hong Kong crisis.
//The former British colony enjoys some freedoms not seen in mainland China - and these are set out in a mini-constitution called the Basic Law.
//In their letter to the prime minister, the cross-party group of former cabinet ministers says the UK government must be seen to lead the international response, as many countries take their cue from Britain over its former colony.
//Jeremy Hunt, David Miliband, Jack Straw, William Hague, Malcolm Rifkind, David Owen and Margaret Beckett all expressed their concern at what they call China's "flagrant breach" of Sino-British agreements by imposing tough national security laws on Hong Kong.
// They urged Mr Johnson to set up an "international contact group" of allies to coordinate any joint action.
//A Downing Street spokesman insisted the government was already playing a leading role with international partners in urging China to think again.
//Mr Raab said the new security legislation "very clearly violates" the autonomy that is guaranteed under Chinese law as well as that in the 1997 agreement. He confirmed the UK will allow those who hold British National (Overseas) (BNO) passports to come to the UK and apply to study and work for an extendable 12-month period.This will in turn "provide a path to citizenship
//Mr Raab said up to three million people registered as a British national (overseas) in Hong Kong could be eligible for UK citizenship if China presses ahead with the law.
//the chairman of Commons foreign affairs committee, Tom Tugendhat, said the government must realise that China has a "very, very authoritarian system of government" and should rethink the partnership between the two.
Full Article: BBC News, (01-Jun)
https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-52872131
Further reading:
Seven former foreign secretaries urge UK to take lead on Hong Kong
https://bit.ly/2U9lhtS
#HongKong #NationalSecurityLaw #BNO #SinoBritishJointDeclaration #Britishcolony #China
BBC News
Hong Kong: Boris Johnson urged to form alliance over China security law
The UK should be leading the response to China's treatment of Hong Kong, seven former foreign secretaries say.
#BorisJohnson #SinoBritishJointDeclaration
UK must be able to raise Hong Kong, COVID issues with China, says Boris Johnson
//British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said on Wednesday that Britain must able to speak out about "serious concerns" about the origins of COVID-19, Hong Kong and the country's critical national infrastructure with China.
"We must feel absolutely free to raise those issues loud and clear with Beijing and that's what we will continue to do," Johnson told parliament.//
Source: Reuters #Jun10
Photo: Telegraph
#CoronavirusPandemic #UK #Beijing
UK must be able to raise Hong Kong, COVID issues with China, says Boris Johnson
//British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said on Wednesday that Britain must able to speak out about "serious concerns" about the origins of COVID-19, Hong Kong and the country's critical national infrastructure with China.
"We must feel absolutely free to raise those issues loud and clear with Beijing and that's what we will continue to do," Johnson told parliament.//
Source: Reuters #Jun10
Photo: Telegraph
#CoronavirusPandemic #UK #Beijing
#Save12 #BringThemBack
British Lawmakers Condemn China for Breaching Sino-British Joint Declaration
In the 12 Hong Kongers case, 10 adult defendants were sentenced to seven months to three years in prison in Yantian, Shenzhen on December 30, 2020. The other two minors were handed over to the Hong Kong police. The Hong Kong police stated that they could charge them with offence of failing to surrender to custody as shall have been appointed.
The āAll-Party Parliamentary Group Hong Kongā of the British Parliament issued a statement on Dec 30, 2020, criticizing the incident as a fierce attack on Hong Kong peopleās freedom and is a repeated violation of the "Sino-British Joint Declarationā. The group reiterated that Britain will continue to fight for freedom for Hong Kong people.
Baroness Bennett and Alistair Carmichael, co-chairs of the "All-Party Parliamentary Group Hong Kongā of the British Parliament, said that the arrests represented how Hong Kong peopleās freedom were being attacked and was another "shocking" violation of the Sino-British Joint Declaration. āIt seems likly they are hoping to warn all the pro-democracy activists, politicians and leaders and show that these people cannot escape the strict National Security Law through these arrests,ā they said.
The group states that they hope to send a clear and firm message to Hong Kong people: "We in the UK will not stop fighting for your freedom. We welcome BNO passport holders to live in the UK, where your rights and freedoms will be protected instead of being weaponized.ā
The organization "Stand with Hong Kong" also stated that the sentence was unacceptable. They believed that the only "crime" committed by these brave young people was to speak out for democracy and freedom and to protect their own safety. The organization calls on the international community to hold the Chinese and Hong Kong authorities responsible for their violations of the international human rights law.
Source: Stand News #Dec30
#SinoBritishJointDeclaration
British Lawmakers Condemn China for Breaching Sino-British Joint Declaration
In the 12 Hong Kongers case, 10 adult defendants were sentenced to seven months to three years in prison in Yantian, Shenzhen on December 30, 2020. The other two minors were handed over to the Hong Kong police. The Hong Kong police stated that they could charge them with offence of failing to surrender to custody as shall have been appointed.
The āAll-Party Parliamentary Group Hong Kongā of the British Parliament issued a statement on Dec 30, 2020, criticizing the incident as a fierce attack on Hong Kong peopleās freedom and is a repeated violation of the "Sino-British Joint Declarationā. The group reiterated that Britain will continue to fight for freedom for Hong Kong people.
Baroness Bennett and Alistair Carmichael, co-chairs of the "All-Party Parliamentary Group Hong Kongā of the British Parliament, said that the arrests represented how Hong Kong peopleās freedom were being attacked and was another "shocking" violation of the Sino-British Joint Declaration. āIt seems likly they are hoping to warn all the pro-democracy activists, politicians and leaders and show that these people cannot escape the strict National Security Law through these arrests,ā they said.
The group states that they hope to send a clear and firm message to Hong Kong people: "We in the UK will not stop fighting for your freedom. We welcome BNO passport holders to live in the UK, where your rights and freedoms will be protected instead of being weaponized.ā
The organization "Stand with Hong Kong" also stated that the sentence was unacceptable. They believed that the only "crime" committed by these brave young people was to speak out for democracy and freedom and to protect their own safety. The organization calls on the international community to hold the Chinese and Hong Kong authorities responsible for their violations of the international human rights law.
Source: Stand News #Dec30
#SinoBritishJointDeclaration
Letter: EU should heed lessons of Hong Kong in China deal
The EU thinks that the EU-China Comprehensive Agreement on Investment (CAI) can bind China into better labour practices and fairer trade practices. This is an utter delusion.
In 2020, China demonstrated how they renege on its treaty-bound obligations to keep Hong Kong free for fifty years. It is disappointing to learn that the city-stateās death-knell does not teach the world anything about China.
Source: FT #Jan05
https://www.ft.com/content/d2b7b9f8-7d56-416d-9098-a0cca2dc6b8b
#SinoBritishJointDeclaration #HongKong #EU #China
The EU thinks that the EU-China Comprehensive Agreement on Investment (CAI) can bind China into better labour practices and fairer trade practices. This is an utter delusion.
In 2020, China demonstrated how they renege on its treaty-bound obligations to keep Hong Kong free for fifty years. It is disappointing to learn that the city-stateās death-knell does not teach the world anything about China.
Source: FT #Jan05
https://www.ft.com/content/d2b7b9f8-7d56-416d-9098-a0cca2dc6b8b
#SinoBritishJointDeclaration #HongKong #EU #China