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My Take
Opinion
Cliff Buddle

My TakeRestrictions on the freedom of assembly must be proportionate

  • The quashing of a conviction over last year’s June 4 vigil highlights important principles as Hong Kong emerges from the pandemic

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Fellow activists support organisers of Hong Kong’s annual Tiananmen vigil, who have pleaded not guilty to unauthorised assembly charges. Photo: SCMP / Dickson Lee

Hong Kong’s courts have had another busy week handling cases with political sensitivities, three years after the city’s anti-government protests. The most eye-catching, ironically, concerned a gathering that did not happen.

Chow Hang-tung was jailed for 15 months in January for inciting people to unlawfully take part in the June 4 vigil last year. The event, held annually for 30 almost years before the pandemic, was banned by police on public health grounds.

But Chow, former vice-chairwoman of the group that organised the vigil to commemorate victims of the Tiananmen crackdown in 1989, won her appeal. Her conviction was quashed. The judgment, in the Court of First Instance, raises important principles. The government is expected to ask the top court to overturn it.

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Chow was convicted as a result of commentaries published soon after confirmation of the ban. She was found to have incited people to attend Victoria Park, the traditional venue for the event. This was considered a crime because the vigil was banned and therefore unlawful.

The event, long seen as one of the most potent symbols of Hong Kong’s freedoms, usually attracts many tens of thousands of people. It was banned for the first time in 2020 on public health grounds as the pandemic took hold. The police have used the same justification for the past two years.

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It was not so easy to justify in 2021. At that time, Hong Kong had few Covid-19 cases. Cinemas and amusement parks were allowed to open at 75 per cent capacity and almost 8,000 people attended a football match. Critics of the ban argued it was based on political rather than health grounds.

A key question in the appeal was whether the ban was lawful. The government argued the issue could not be considered in a criminal trial. It said the prohibition had been ordered by police and upheld by an appeal board. The only way of challenging it was through a judicial review.

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