Lee Cheuk-yan and Chow Hang-tung seek early acquittals on subversion charges relating to their role in the HK Alliance. From HKFP…
Barrister Erik Shum, representing Lee Cheuk-yan, argued on Monday that prosecutors erred in saying that there are no “lawful means” to call for an end to the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) rule.
…“If there exists a lawful method to end CCP’s leadership, then the prosecution will lose its entire basis,” Shum told the court in Cantonese.
He cited Articles 62 and 64 of the Chinese constitution, which stipulate the mechanism by which the top decision-making body, the National People’s Congress, can amend the constitution.
While the Alliance had never explicitly called for an amendment, Shum said the group also did not outline an action plan for ending one-party rule. “It was merely a slogan and never a call for action,” he said.
In today’s Hong Kong you can, of course, be sent to prison for a slogan. But this raises a broader question: at what point do NatSec laws end and freedom of expression begins? Are people allowed to discuss the possibility of CCP rule coming to an end?
Chow Hang-tung – a barrister in her own right – argued that China’s constitution does not have direct effect in Hong Kong, and that prosecutors and judges lack a full understanding of the logic of the Mainland legal system (hence her request to call an expert witness)…
…She said the prosecution had adopted a broad reading of the constitution and had erred in alleging that she had directly breached it.
The constitution “certainly is applicable to Hong Kong, but that does not mean it can be directly implemented as law,” she said in Cantonese. She called it a matter of “direct effect,” referring to a legal principle allowing a law to be directly enforced in a local jurisdiction.
…Chow said that expert testimony was needed as the prosecution had not called an expert to interpret the Chinese constitution. All issues concerning the interpretation of the constitution “remain in a state where no evidence has been given,” she said.
The Jamestown Foundation looks at Beijing’s white paper Realizing National Security Under ‘One Country, Two Systems in Hong Kong, released the day after Jimmy Lai’s sentencing a month ago…
The 2026 white paper endorses the narrative that Hong Kong posed a national security threat to the PRC well before the 2019 anti-extradition movement. …the document asserts that the origins of this threat can be traced to resistance against the proposed Article 23 national security legislation in 2003… From the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) perspective, the failure to enact that legislation created structural vulnerabilities that enabled subsequent waves of mass mobilization.
The white paper links the 2003 setback to later protest movements, including the 2012 campaign against national education, the 2014 Umbrella Movement, the 2016 “Fish Ball” unrest, and the 2019 anti-extradition bill protests.
The inclusion of this narrative signals that mainland authorities now retrospectively characterize the 2003 mass mobilization—when more than 500,000 people protested the proposed Article 23 legislation—as a threat to national security. This reinterpretation stands in tension with the fact that the protests were widely regarded at the time as a lawful exercise of freedoms of expression and political participation protected under the Basic Law.
By framing the 2003 protests as security risks, the white paper recasts Hong Kong’s long-standing democratization efforts and defense of civil liberties as destabilizing forces. Through this revisionist account of post-handover social movements, the document provides ideological justification for Beijing’s hardline turn…
The report also mentions the timing of the white paper’s release and its concerns about critics and activists among the Hong Kong diaspora overseas.
Today’s guest star: Country Joe McDonald, who died a couple of days ago. Obits aren’t mentioning it much, but in later years he was a noted authority on Florence Nightingale.












