HK’s Top Court Overturns Conviction Of Protestor Saying Thought Crime Isn’t Illegal In HK Yet

  • Judges warn law could do “violence to language”
  • Foreign envoys, lawyers closely watching rulings
  • Hong Kong government says it “respects” decision

HONG KONG, July 15 (Reuters) – Hong Kong’s highest court on Friday overturned the conviction of a protester for carrying plastic zip fasteners, with judges warning that the authorities’ expanded interpretation of the law risked creating a “thought crime”.

Reporting by Greg Torode Editing by Mark Heinrich and Raissa Kasolowsky

Chan Chun-kit was sentenced to five and a half months’ jail by a lower court after his arrest in November 2019 towards the end of prolonged and sometimes violent anti-government protests that rocked the Asian financial hub that year.

Prosecutors had said the 48 zip ties that police found in his backpack fell foul of section 17 of the Summary Offences Ordinance in that he possessed “an instrument fit for unlawful purposes”.

The defendant denied the charges.

The lower court magistrate ruled that Chan intended to use the ties to illegally bind street railings together to build barricades for fights and roadblocks.

The arguments and ruling were later upheld on appeal.

But a panel of five judges on the Court of Final Appeal unanimously overturned both the conviction and sentence on Friday, saying such a wide interpretation “would do violence to the language”.

 

“Furthermore, such a construction would render the scope of section 17 extremely wide and effectively turn the section into a thought crime,” the judges said in their ruling.

The panel was headed by Chief Justice Andrew Cheung and included a foreign jurist, Anthony Gleeson, the former Chief Justice of the High Court of Australia.

Rulings by Hong Kong’s highest court are being closely watched by lawyers, activists and diplomats as national security and other protest-related cases start to work up through the court system.

Both local and foreign lawyers say the top court will be vital in the months and years ahead to ensure Hong Kong’s rule of law is maintained.

Read the full story at Reuters