Letters | Hong Kong protester trials: a case for mercy for the young and less culpable
- As the chairman of the Bar Association pointed out, the Prosecution Code says the public interest should play a part in the decision to prosecute
- Young people facing charges not involving serious violence should be spared
He added that the Prosecution Code published by the Department of Justice says a decision to prosecute is not made just because the police have enough evidence to go to court and secure a conviction, and that public interest also plays a part in the decision-making process.
Dykes said people would be wrong to think that a decision not to prosecute when there is enough evidence to secure a conviction runs contrary to the rule of law. “The prosecutor’s looking beyond the four corners of a charge sheet to other matters, both personal to the person charged, and to other matters is a part of the rule of law,” Dykes noted.
Dykes also said “a fair number” of the guests at the ceremony will have participated in recent demonstrations to show “discontent with the Hong Kong government”.
