
Nat. security trial for Tiananmen vigil group to begin in November
High Court Judge Alex Lee, one of the three judges presiding over the case, said on Monday that the court had set aside 75 days for the national security trial scheduled to begin in November, with hearings to be held at the West Kowloon Law Courts.
Lee, who is presiding over the national security trial of media tycoon Jimmy Lai, had earlier fixed May 6 as the start date for the trial of the Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements of China but delayed it to November, citing scheduling reasons.
The judge also set aside a date to handle lawyer-activist Chow Hang-tung's application to have the charge against her thrown out.
The court will hear Chow's application to quash the incitement of subversion charge on November 3, and proceed with the trial on November 11 if her application fails, Lee said.
Chow, along with former lawmakers Albert Ho and Lee Cheuk-yan, were former members of the alliance charged alongside the vigil group itself with inciting subversion of state power under the Beijing-imposed national security law.
The three face a maximum penalty of life imprisonment if convicted.
Chow had earlier applied to have the charge against her thrown out on the grounds that the prosecution had failed to inform the defendants about the accusations in question.
Guilty plea
Erik Shum, Ho's lawyer, said that his client intended to plead guilty and was in talks with the prosecution regarding the ex-lawmaker's plea. Shum had already said earlier in February that Ho intended to enter a guilty plea.
Ho would be excused from hearings if he pleaded guilty, but may have to testify under some circumstances, Lee said.
In the event that Ho has any disagreements with the prosecution's version of events, a 'Newton hearing' will be ordered to determine the factual basis for sentencing. It will take place at the same time as the November trial, Lee said.
However, the likelihood that Ho would disagree with the prosecution's facts would not be high, Shum told the court on Monday.
For three decades, the alliance organised an annual candlelight vigil to commemorate the victims of the Tiananmen crackdown, which occurred on June 4, 1989. It is estimated that hundreds, perhaps thousands, died when the People's Liberation Army quashed a student-led pro-democracy movement in Beijing.
The vigil in Victoria Park has been banned since Beijing imposed its security law in June 2020. The alliance voted a year later to disband after its former leaders were prosecuted.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


South China Morning Post
12 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Quad alliance risks unravelling as Trump strains ties with India and Japan
Beijing must be watching with satisfaction as US President Donald Trump has, in less than 200 days, come close to unravelling one of the few foreign policy legacies of his first term: the fragile coalition countering China in the Indo-Pacific. Advertisement The rationale behind Trump's deliberate straining of ties with India and Japan – two of Washington's most vital regional partners in balancing Beijing – through tariffs, sanctions threats and incendiary rhetoric remains opaque, likely driven more by domestic political posturing than strategic coherence. Yet the damage is both tangible and potentially lasting, placing the strategic viability of the Quad –Washington's four-way military pact with Japan, India and Australia – under the most severe test since its revival in 2017. At the same time, it has bolstered perceptions among authoritarian regimes that the US is in terminal decline. Since April, Trump has slapped 25 per cent 'reciprocal tariffs' on India and threatened an additional 25 per cent in secondary sanctions over its continued imports of Russian oil, effectively raising duties to 50 per cent. While the US leader claimed on Monday that the steep tariffs had dealt a 'big blow' to Moscow's beleaguered economy, the move has plunged US-India relations to their lowest point since 1998, when Delhi conducted its nuclear tests and faced an international backlash. Advertisement Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who skilfully navigated relations with Trump during his first term and was among the first foreign leaders to visit the White House following Trump's return, was clearly taken aback by the tariffs and the US leader's overtures to India's arch-rival, Pakistan.


South China Morning Post
13 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Philippines to push for binding South China Sea code in 2026 – will it succeed?
In an interview for his podcast last Friday, Marcos Jnr confirmed his side would 'certainly try' for the outcome, stressing the urgency of a legally binding agreement to maintain stability in the region. Four Asean states – Brunei, Malaysia, Vietnam and the Philippines – have competing claims against Beijing in the South China Sea , yet disputed areas in the Philippines have become prominent flashpoints for these tensions. 'We will certainly try, because a code of conduct is very, very important,' Marcos said, adding that his country's maritime zones had become the most volatile parts of the waterway. An international tribunal ruled in favour of the Philippines' claims in 2016. Beijing has constantly rejected the decision and upheld its nine-dash-line claim, which it says is based on historical accounts. According to Marcos, a COC would outline acceptable and appropriate behaviour while preventing actions that could further provoke tensions among claimant states, including ship collisions and the construction of artificial islands.


South China Morning Post
16 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
China urged to overhaul its tax system to boost consumption
As China seeks public feedback on the implementation of its recently passed value-added tax (VAT) law, a group of economists has urged the government to introduce more radical reforms to give local authorities stronger incentives to spur consumption and rein in their excessive industrial expansion. The new VAT law, which is due to come into force next year, introduces a range of technical changes to the tax code that bring China more into line with international practices, but the economists argue that a bolder overhaul of the system could be key to helping the country rebalance its economy. China's current VAT system – the country's largest source of tax revenue – undermines Beijing's efforts to develop a more consumption-driven economy by creating an incentive structure that dampens officials' 'enthusiasm for fostering consumer markets', the economists said in an article published in early August. The main issue with the system is that it allocates tax revenue to regions based on where a product or service was produced, rather than where it was consumed, according to the paper co-authored by Sheng Songcheng, a former head of statistics at China's central bank, and two researchers at the CEIBS Lujiazui International Institute of Finance. The policy effectively rewards regions with large industrial bases, which encourages officials to pursue 'a local development model that overemphasises investment while neglecting consumption, exacerbating overcapacity and hindering economic transformation and upgrading', the authors said. While the system was effective in supporting local government finances during an earlier period in China's development, 'its drawbacks have become increasingly apparent as consumption gradually emerges as the main growth driver', they added in the article posted online by the China Chief Economist Forum think tank. To fix the problem, the economists called for a revamp of the current allocation system to ensure that more tax revenue is directed to locations where consumption occurs.