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Crime in Hong Kong
Hong KongPolitics

Hong Kong plan to send fugitives to mainland China not cause for human rights concerns, security minister says, as 55 countries already have extradition deals with Beijing

  • Secretary for Security John Lee tells lawmakers to look at proposal objectively

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Secretary for Security John Lee at Legco on Friday. Photo: Winson Wong
Alvin Lum

Hong Kong’s security minister on Friday told local lawmakers not to judge through “coloured lenses” a plan to hand over fugitives to mainland China, because 55 countries already trusted Beijing enough to have signed extradition treaties.

Secretary for Security John Lee Ka-chiu defended the government’s proposal to transfer suspects on a case-by-case basis to and from Taiwan, Macau, mainland China and any other jurisdiction where a formal agreement with the city was absent.

Pro-democracy lawmakers have repeatedly voiced strong opposition to the plan in light of the mainland’s human rights record, but Lee said the proposal was about securing justice.

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The issue received attention in February when a young Hong Kong woman named Poon Hiu-wing disappeared in Taiwan with her boyfriend Chan Tong-kai. Taiwanese authorities suspected Chan may have killed her but were unable to prosecute Chan, who remains in Hong Kong.

A security panel discusses the proposal at Legco on Friday. Photo: Winson Wong
A security panel discusses the proposal at Legco on Friday. Photo: Winson Wong
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Lee said Taiwan had filed an extradition request but Hong Kong was unable to oblige for now because the necessary legislation was not in place.

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