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Hong Kong

Persecuted protected by customary international law, UNHCR says

The idea of HK exempting itself from international law that opposes sending people to face possible abuse must be refuted, refugee body says

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Joyce Man

The principle of not sending a person to a place where he may be persecuted is "beyond doubt" customary international law, the UN refugee agency says.

The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees weighed in yesterday at the hearing of three African men who were making their last attempt to challenge the way the city vetted refugee claims.

The trio argues that the government must assess the applications itself rather than passing the responsibility to the UNHCR.

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"[The principle] is, at minimum, customary international law," Gerard McCoy SC, for the UNHCR, told the Court of Final Appeal. "The matter, we say, is simply beyond doubt."

The UN agency said it seemed that the Hong Kong government wanted to contend Asian countries were somehow exempted, McCoy said.

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"This has to be refuted. The idea of a Hong Kong or regional opt-out from this fundamental cornerstone is inconceivable."

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