Hong Kong court to deliver verdict in sedition case against closed Stand News on Thursday
Verdict, originally slated for last October, was adjourned three times pending appellate court ruling on separate sedition case
The verdict, first slated for last October, was adjourned three times pending a ruling by the Court of Appeal in a separate sedition case. A substantive hearing in the case’s final appeal at the top court is still pending.
District Judge Kwok Wai-kin, who presided over the Stand News trial, was to retire at the end of August but had his term extended until November next year.
The court also recorded a not guilty plea from Best Pencil HK, Stand News’ holding company, which was unrepresented in the 55-day trial.
Prosecutors at first relied on the 17 articles, including interviews with opposition politicians and activists as well as critiques of the security law and relevant enforcement actions, as proof that Stand News had instigated hatred and contempt towards authorities.
Prosecutors argued the hundreds of reports showed the news agency’s intent to steer public opinion in favour of the opposition when it ran the original 17 stories between July 2020 and December 2021.
They also maintained that “false” and “misleading” media reports had contributed to what they categorised as “thought crimes” after the 2019 social unrest, as they highlighted 45 examples of previous convictions involving online calls for Hong Kong independence and incitement of hatred towards police and officials.
Defence lawyers warned against the encroachment of speech and press freedom through the prosecution of “politically incorrect” publications and stressed the 17 articles in question only represented an insignificant portion of more than 100,000 reports the website ran in its nearly seven years of operation.
Lawyers pushed back at the prosecution’s contention that Stand News had been used as a political platform glorifying “criminals” and disseminating their “illegal” agendas.
They also highlighted a lack of evidence that the 45 court cases cited by the prosecution were the result of media influence.
Chung and Lam were incarcerated for at least 11 months before they were bailed in the middle of the high-profile trial that has lasted nearly three times longer than the original estimated length.
The protracted case is partly a result of Chung’s decision to go into the witness box. He gave evidence for 36 days, including 26 days under cross-examination by the prosecution.
Sedition is recognised by the Court of Final Appeal as an offence that can endanger the country’s safety and cases can only be heard by judges approved by the chief executive.
The old sedition offence, with the exception of the two trials still to be concluded, has had a 100 per cent conviction rate since the 2020 security law came into force.
Convictions and prison sentences have been handed down to 41 defendants.