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Beijing’s Hong Kong office slams intimidation of judge in tycoon Jimmy Lai’s case – Metro US

Beijing’s Hong Kong office slams intimidation of judge in tycoon Jimmy Lai’s case

FILE PHOTO: Media mogul Jimmy Lai, founder of Apple Daily,
FILE PHOTO: Media mogul Jimmy Lai, founder of Apple Daily, leaves the Court of Final Appeal by prison van in Hong Kong

HONG KONG (Reuters) – Beijing’s office that oversees matters in Hong Kong has warned of threats made to a judge who sentenced media tycoon Jimmy Lai and other democracy activists for their roles in an unauthorised assembly on Oct. 1, 2019.

A representative for the Hong Kong and Macau Affairs Office (HKMAO) said the presiding judge had received threatening phone calls, which the office said would not be tolerated.

“This is a serious threat to the personal safety of judges, a flagrant challenge to the judicial system in Hong Kong and a gross violation of the rule of law and order in Hong Kong,” Xinhua quoted a statement by HKMAO as saying late on Sunday.

The statement followed one by Hong Kong’s Department of Justice late on Friday that said a judge had been intimidated, without providing details.

On Friday, judge Amanda Woodcock sentenced Lai, an ardent critic of Beijing, to 14 months in jail, and nine others to up to 18 months for their roles in the rally.

Hong Kong arrested more than 10,000 people over anti-government protests in 2019, and some of those cases are now making their way through the court system.

The unrest led Beijing to impose a contentious national security law on its freest city in June 2020, and more than 100 people have been arrested under the law so far, including Lai.

The law punishes what Beijing broadly defines as secession, sedition, terrorism and collusion with foreign forces with up to life in jail.

Forty-seven democracy activists charged with conspiracy to commit subversion are set to appear in court on Monday, in a case that has drawn criticism from Western governments and international rights groups.

Hong Kong returned to Chinese rule in 1997 with a guarantee of a high degree of autonomy until 2047. Critics say authorities are chipping away at those freedoms, an assertion officials in Hong Kong and Beijing reject.

(Reporting By Anne Marie Roantree. Editing by Gerry Doyle)