Published: 08:51, December 7, 2020 | Updated: 09:01, June 5, 2023
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HK blasts threats against judge
By Gang Wen in Hong Kong

The Hong Kong Special Administrative Region government and legal professionals over the weekend strongly condemned acts of intimidation  against  the  city’s judicial  officers,  saying  there is zero­ tolerance for such  illegal acts. 

Chief Magistrate Victor So Wai-tak of West Kowloon Magistrates’ Courts reportedly received a bomb threat against him and his family on  Thursday,  the  same  day  he denied bail to media tycoon Jimmy Lai Chee-­ying in a fraud trial on the grounds that Lai is a flight risk. The Hong Kong government later confirmed the incident in a statement released on Saturday. 

Chief Executive Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-­ngor appointed six judges, including So, to adjudicate national security cases. 

Tee HKSAR government said in a statement neither the SAR nor any law­-abiding jurisdiction will tolerate such violent and illegal acts against the judiciary

Any attempt to interfere with a judicial officer is an assault on the rule of law and is  therefore extremely  serious,  Hong  Kong’s former director of public prosecutions  Grenville  Cross  told  China Daily. 

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“Quite clearly, the threats to So will have to be thoroughly investigated by the police,” Cross said. He added the police will need to try to identify the caller to see if they can assemble  enough  evidence  to either charge the person with criminal intimidation, a crime punishable by a maximum of five years’ imprisonment under the Crimes Ordinance, and subversion under the National Security Law, which is punishable by not less than 10 years’ imprisonment. 

Melissa Pang Ka-ye, president of the Law Society of Hong Kong, urged the government to follow up on  these illegal acts against  the judiciary. She stressed that the courts and  judges should adjudicate fairly on the legal and factual issues involved in each case, regardless of its nature or the person involved. 

Lawmaker Priscilla Leung Mei-fun said that the Hong Kong community should stand  together in support of the judges’ safety and work and uphold the dignity of the judiciary. 

The HKSAR government said in its statement on Saturday that neither the SAR nor any law­-abiding jurisdiction will tolerate such violent and illegal acts against the judiciary. 

In the same statement, the Department of Justice warned that any such attacks may  violate the National Security Law for Hong Kong. 

According to the law, which was enacted on June 30, anyone who organizes or participates in an act by force or threat of force that seriously disrupts or undermines the law­-abiding performance of duties by organs of the SAR, including the judiciary, is guilty of an offense. 

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The DOJ also refuted “groundless accusations” made by local and external critics against court decisions in recent months. These critics have sought to discredit the SAR’s efforts as a “crackdown on dissent” as it prosecutes illegal activities during last year’s violent protests, the department said. 

In July, So ruled on the city’s first case  brought under the National Security Law. A  23­year­-old local man was charged with terrorism and inciting secession as he rode a motorcycle into a group of police officers  during  an  unauthorized protest on July 1 while carrying a flag saying “liberate Hong Kong”.