Hong Kong Free Press: In U-turn, Hong Kong Department of Justice deletes national security case index from website only days after publication!

Hong Kong’s Department of Justice (DoJ) has deleted an online database of national security cases, without explanation and days after it was published.

The index, published last Thursday, included PDF case summaries relating to 106 national security law cases that have been completed since Beijing inserted the legislation into Hong Kong’s mini constitution in June 2020.

However, the index had disappeared soon afterwards, according to a Sunday newsletter from local news platform TransitJam.

DOJ NSL cases
DOJ NSL cases
Slide to compare: The DoJ website last Thursday, and as of today. Photo: DoJ website & WayBack Machine.

A DoJ press release last Thursday said the case summaries were made public in an “open and transparent” manner to “serve as a convenient and practical tool for promoting national security education and conducting legal research on the national security laws.”

“This body of case-law helps us understand the requirements of our national security laws and how they are being applied by the courts,” the Secretary for Justice Paul Lam was quoted as saying.

National security cases are overseen by handpicked judges, and have thus far seen a 100 per cent conviction rate.

When approached by HKFP for an explanation, a spokesperson for the DoJ said on Monday: “Content of relevant webpages will be adjusted and amended having regard to circumstances.”

The department did not respond when asked why the content was removed and whether it would be restored.

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In U-turn, Hong Kong Department of Justice deletes national security case index from website