//An activist detained under Hong Kong’s national security law is planning to apply to the High Court to lift restrictions on the media’s reporting of her bail hearing on Wednesday.
In a message published on Tuesday, Gwyneth Ho argued that laws banning the media from reporting details of bail hearings failed to protect the interests of the accused. The press should be allowed to freely report what happened during those hearings, she said.
“After the defendants under the national security law were arrested and remanded in custody, the reporting restrictions on bail hearings have turned the process into a ‘black box’, and has created widespread fears in society,” she wrote.
“The public has no way of knowing the contents of the bail hearings under the national security law, especially the evidence used by the prosecutors and the courts’ assessment of the defendants.”
Ho is among 47 democracy figures charged with conspiracy to commit subversion, which carries a maximum sentence of life in prison. They are accused of plotting to subvert state power via an informal primary poll held last July. Only 13 of the 47 have been granted bail since early March.
After being detained for more than six months, Ho will make her bail application at the High Court on Wednesday morning.
She publicised her arguments a day in advance, saying the reporting restrictions set out under section 9P of the Criminal Procedure Ordinance were originally meant to ensure that defendants received a fair trial. The law limits media coverage of bail hearings to basic information such as the defendant’s name, the court’s decision and bail conditions.
Those regulations backfired because the lack of transparency had caused the public to doubt whether the national security law had been fairly implemented, Ho wrote, adding that Hong Kong society was worried about arbitrary arrests based on flimsy evidence.
“In reality, the reporting restrictions benefit the Department of Justice, as it no longer needs to publicly explain the basis of the charges and various political accusations,” she wrote.
“The restrictions have clearly contravened the principle of public justice, and if the courts still refuse to lift them, the public will inevitably suspect that the courts accept this unfair situation.”
The open administration of justice was a fundamental principle of Hong Kong’s common law system, and courts should be scrutinised by the public and the press, Ho said, quoting the city’s former chief justice Denys Roberts.
Hong Kong courts have mostly kept reporting restrictions in place for bail applications under the national security law, though some judges have issued written rulings explaining their decision to grant or refuse bail, which are typically published after a delay.
Earlier on Tuesday, the court again denied the bail application of former pro-democracy lawmaker Gary Fan, a co-defendant in the subversion case. Like most of the 47, Fan has been in custody for months with no trial date lined up as yet.
By Holmes Chan//
同時也有10000部Youtube影片,追蹤數超過2,910的網紅コバにゃんチャンネル,也在其Youtube影片中提到,...
arbitrary sentence 在 Yilianboy Facebook 的最佳解答
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刻意唱反調
Translation: @benkongenglish
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對於親近的家人
心思開放不拘小節的朋友
我愛刻意對他們唱反調
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如果他說咖啡香甜
我就會說 但沒有苦澀就沒有咖啡的滋味
如果他說雨天惱人
我就會說 久等這場雨的植物得滋潤生長
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他若說雨天涼爽
我便心疼曬衣的人 忘了雨具的旅人
他若說苦咖啡好
我便說甜有戀愛的記憶
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凡事凡物圓滿完整
如圓潤飽滿的珍珠
珍珠原只是珍珠
若說了上 就有下
若說了前 就有後
若給了光 就有影
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拙作<你的藍色不是我的藍色>中
我撒下許多問句
推敲一顆顆珍珠
生怕武斷的刃不慎劃下傷痕
問句背後仍可略見我的珍珠
而你的珍珠可是我的珍珠?
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I like to hold the opposite view to my dearest family and friends who are open minded, not drilling on the details.
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If he says the coffee is sweet,
I would say coffee is not coffee without the bitterness.
If he says rainy weather is annoying,
I would say the plants have been waiting for this rain for a long time.
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If he says it’s cool and comfortable on a rainy day,
I would say my thoughts are with people who need to dry their clothes or travellers who forgot to bring their umbrellas
If he says bitter coffee tastes good,
I would say there’s a memory of love in sweet coffee.
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Everything is full and complete like pearls.
Pearls are just pearls.
If you define up, then there’s down
If you define forward, then there’s backward
If there’s light, then there’s shadow
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In my book
I laid down many questions, hoping to see every pearl as what it really is clearly and thoroughly, for fear that a mistake is committed by any arbitrary sentence.
You might vaguely see my pearls behind my questions.
And are my pearls your pearls?
arbitrary sentence 在 黃之鋒 Joshua Wong Facebook 的最讚貼文
【Please keep a close watch to Tony Chung】
https://twitter.com/joshuawongcf/status/1321677421519622144
1/ Among many differences in ideals and tactics between us, Tony has been through similar state-driven harassment and attacks as I had in previous months. Today he carries four charges, including secession under National Security Law, publishing seditious material and 2 money-laundering offenses.
2/ Before mentioning in January 2021, Tony is spending Christmas and New Year in Pik Uk Prison, where I served my first sentence 3yrs ago. National Security Law Magistrate's decision at this peculiar timing is seen as a prologue to more brutal crackdown on activists refusing to surrender.
3/ When laws are used as a repressive judicial tool against the people, youths are forced to abandon dreams but to live with these: daily harassment, arbitrary arrests, multiple charges, remanded in jail as if eyes and ears of authorities everywhere, in a place called Hong Kong.
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✍️聯署要求送返十二名被捕港人:https://bit.ly/save12youthspetitions
💪小額支持我的獨家分析及文章:https://bit.ly/joshuawonghk
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╞#存亡號召 #絕處逢生
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╞📷https://www.instagram.com/joshua1013
╞📧joshua@joshuawongcf.com
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