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Britain pulls its judges from Hong Kong high court so as not to ‘legitimize oppression’
2022-03-30 00:00:00.0     洛杉矶时报-世界与民族     原网页

       LONDON —

       Britain is withdrawing its judges from Hong Kong’s highest court, saying Wednesday that letting them remain on the panel would “legitimize oppression.”

       British judges have sat on the Court of Final Appeal since the former British colony was returned to China in 1997. The two currently on the court submitted their resignations Wednesday.

       A national security law was imposed on Hong Kong by Beijing in 2020, prompting complaints that the Communist regime was eroding the autonomy that was a condition of the city’s handover to China in 1997 and ruining its status as a trade and financial center.

       Pro-democracy figures in Hong Kong have been imprisoned. They include Jimmy Lai, the 74-year-old former publisher of the Apple Daily newspaper, which shut down under government pressure, and organizers of candlelight memorials of China’s deadly 1989 crackdown on pro-democracy demonstrators in Beijing’s Tiananmen Square.

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       The British government said it was “no longer tenable for serving U.K. judges” to sit on the Court of Final Appeal because of the increasingly oppressive laws enacted by China. British Foreign Secretary Liz Truss said that, “since the National Security Law was imposed, authorities have cracked down on free speech, the free press and free association.“

       “The situation has reached a tipping point where it is no longer tenable for British judges to sit on Hong Kong’s leading court, and would risk legitimizing oppression,” Truss said.

       World & Nation

       Guilty verdict in first trial under Hong Kong security law

       Tong Ying-kit, 24, pleaded not guilty to inciting secession and terrorism during a protest last year in Hong Kong. He could face life in prison.

       She said the decision to pull British judges out after so many years was taken by the British government in consultation with the head of the U.K. Supreme Court.

       Conservative lawmaker Iain Duncan Smith, a longtime critic of the Chinese government, said Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s administration “has done the right thing here, and not a minute too soon.”

       He said the presence of British judges was “lending legitimacy to a regime hell-bent on undermining our way of life.”

       


标签:综合
关键词: oppression     Truss     government     Hong Kong     China     Pro-democracy figures     British judges    
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