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In addition to calling for the release of those detained under the national security law, the European Parliament resolution also condemned Hong Kong’s Article 23, the Safeguarding National Security Ordinance. Photo: ISD

European Parliament slams Hong Kong’s jailing of EU national on security charges, calls for freeing of Jimmy Lai

  • Resolution calls for freeing of Joseph John, as well as activist Andy Li and newspaper publisher Jimmy Lai
  • Measure also condemns Hong Kong’s passage of domestic national security bill, and asks EU to impose sanctions on Chief Executive John Lee

The European Parliament adopted a resolution on Thursday criticising the first jailing of a person with EU nationality under Hong Kong’s national security law.

Joseph John, a dual national of Hong Kong and Portugal living in Britain, was sentenced to five years in prison this month for conspiring to incite others to commit secession through online posts pushing for the city’s independence.

John, identified as the president of the now-defunct Hong Kong Independence Party in Britain, was arrested by national security police in November 2022, a month after returning to Hong Kong to take care of his mother, who was suffering from dementia.

District Court Judge Ernest Lin Kam-hung had said in sentencing that John “distorted history, demonised the Chinese government, and appealed to foreign countries to destroy Hong Kong and China”.

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In a non-binding urgency resolution that was adopted by a show of hands during the last sitting of EU lawmakers before elections in June, members urged the Hong Kong government “to immediately and unconditionally release” John along with other detainees including newspaper tycoon Jimmy Lai Chee-ying and activist turned prosecution witness Andy Li Yu-hin.

The resolution also criticised the detention of Polish national Aleksandra Bielakowska, a staff member for Reporters Without Borders, who travelled to Hong Kong from Taiwan to attend Lai’s trial.

Bielakowska was deported after being questioned at Hong Kong airport for six hours.

Lai, former owner of the now-defunct tabloid newspaper Apple Daily, is currently on trial on charges of colluding with foreign forces and conspiring to publish seditious material. He denies the charges.

Li is testifying for the prosecution in Lai’s trial after pleading guilty to a charge of conspiracy to collude with foreign forces.

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Hong Kong media tycoon Jimmy Lai's high-stakes national security trial gets under way

Hong Kong media tycoon Jimmy Lai's high-stakes national security trial gets under way

Both in its resolution and during a debate in Strasbourg on Wednesday night, the parliament reiterated a long-standing request for the European Union to impose sanctions on Chief Executive John Lee Ka-chiu.

The 500-word resolution “urges the [European] Council to review its 2020 Conclusions on Hong Kong and adopt sanctions under the EU Global Human Rights Sanctions Regime against Chief Executive John Lee and all HK and PRC officials responsible for the crackdown on freedoms in HK”.

There are generally three urgency resolutions about topical human rights issues at each of the European Parliament’s plenary sessions. They are negotiated quickly among a small group of lawmakers, before being debated and voted on by the chamber.

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As well as Hong Kong, lawmakers this week adopted resolutions voicing “concern over potential repeal of female genital mutilation ban in the Gambia” and “the repression of civil society” in Azerbaijan.

The Hong Kong resolution condemned the passage of a domestic national security bill that was fast-tracked through the city’s Legislative Council in March. Under Article 23 of the city’s mini-constitution, the Basic Law, Hong Kong was required to enact its own national security legislation.

The Safeguarding National Security Ordinance spans 39 offences divided into five categories: treason; insurrection, incitement to mutiny and disaffection, and acts with seditious intention; sabotage; external interference; and theft of state secrets and espionage.

Hong Kong’s Chief Executive John Lee Ka-chiu (centre) applauds with lawmakers following passage of Article 23 at the Legislative Council on March 19. Photo: AP

Treason, insurrection, inciting members of the Chinese armed forces to mutiny, and colluding with external forces to damage public infrastructure are the four offences punishable by up to life imprisonment. The latter can also apply to offenders based outside Hong Kong.

Lee has said the legislation was required to guard against “potential sabotage and undercurrents that try to create troubles”. In particular, he pointed to “ideas of an independent Hong Kong”.

The European Parliament resolution said that the adoption of the legislation “erases the last vestiges of fundamental freedoms in Hong Kong”.

It expressed “alarm” that the law “significantly impacts the work of the EU’s office and the member states’ consulates” in the city.

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While the EU has criticised the law, it has not taken any punitive steps against Hong Kong.

In March, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said the US was preparing to impose new visa restrictions on Hong Kong officials deemed “responsible for the intensifying crackdown on rights and freedoms” in the semi-autonomous city.

Speaking on behalf of the commission’s leadership at the debate, Virginijus Sinkevicius, the European commissioner for the environment, said that the law “threatens to further accelerate the erosion of fundamental freedoms and political pluralism in Hong Kong”.

European Commissioner Virginijus Sinkevicius said the Article 23 legislation “threatens to further accelerate the erosion of fundamental freedoms and political pluralism in Hong Kong”. Photo: EPA-EFE

“The definition of state secrets found in the new legislation is exceedingly broad and enforce the definitions prevailing in mainland China to Hong Kong,” Sinkevicius said.

Reinhard Buetikofer, the head of the parliament’s China delegation who is retiring after this term, called on “all EU authorities to act vis-à-vis Hong Kong”.

He called for sanctions on Lee and for EU member states to “suspend all still-existing extradition treaties with Hong Kong and China”.

The Article 23 legislation complements the national security law imposed by Beijing on the city in June 2020 after months of anti-government protests. The 2020 legislation targets acts of secession, subversion, terrorism and collusion with foreign forces, with a maximum penalty of life in prison.

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