logo
Hong Kong plans to update prison rules to better guard national security

Hong Kong plans to update prison rules to better guard national security

Hong Kong's security and prison agencies plan to update the current prison rules to tighten visiting criteria for specific lawyers, doctors and chaplains to ensure they safeguard national security, prevent crime and maintain order and discipline of those behind bars.
In a paper submitted to the Legislative Council on Thursday, the Security Bureau and the Correctional Services Department laid out five 'key purposes' that would form the grounds for prison staff to impose additional restrictions, conditions or prohibitions on inmates.
The proposed rules would also require correctional officers to apply for court warrants to be able to restrict visits to inmates from designated lawyers and doctors on the grounds of safeguarding national security.
'There were cases in the past where the visiting mechanism was abused by some people using 'humanitarian relief' as a pretext to visit for [the purpose of] influencing persons-in-custody with soft tactics,' authorities said in the paper.
However, authorities said that inmates would still be able to have access to confidential legal advice and consult other lawyers of their own choice under the new changes. Inmates could also lodge an appeal over the warrant.
Government sources said that the aim of amending the prison rules through subsidiary laws would be to update 'outdated' rules and plug national security loopholes in legal and medical visit arrangements, adding that officials were keenly aware of the need to balance inmates' rights with the new restrictions.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

China tells EU it cannot afford Russian loss in Ukraine war, sources say
China tells EU it cannot afford Russian loss in Ukraine war, sources say

South China Morning Post

time3 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

China tells EU it cannot afford Russian loss in Ukraine war, sources say

Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi told the European Union's top diplomat on Wednesday that Beijing cannot afford a Russian loss in Ukraine because it fears the United States would then shift its whole focus to Beijing, according to several people familiar with the exchange. The comment, to the EU's Kaja Kallas, would confirm what many in Brussels believe to be Beijing's position but jar with China's public utterances. The foreign minstry regularly says China is 'not a party' to the war. Some EU officials involved were surprised by the frankness of Wang's remarks. Wang is said to have rejected, however, the accusation that China was materially supporting Russia's war effort, financially or militarily, insisting that if it was doing so, the conflict would have ended long ago. During a marathon four-hour debate on a wide range of geopolitical and commercial grievances, Wang was said to have given Kallas – the former Estonian prime minister who only late last year took up her role as the bloc's de facto foreign affairs chief – several 'history lessons and lectures'. A soldier of Ukraine's 30th Separate Mechanised Brigade prepares to fires a rocket launcher toward Russian positions at the front line in the Donetsk region, Ukraine, June 3, 2025. Photo: AP Some EU officials felt he was giving her a lesson in realpolitik, part of which focused on Beijing's belief that Washington will soon turn its full attention eastward, two officials said.

National security offenders to be disqualified from Hong Kong's Legco elections
National security offenders to be disqualified from Hong Kong's Legco elections

South China Morning Post

time5 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

National security offenders to be disqualified from Hong Kong's Legco elections

Hong Kong authorities have proposed disqualifying anyone convicted of offences endangering national security from being nominated to run in a Legislative Council election or serving as a lawmaker. Advertisement The Electoral Affairs Commission said a public consultation for the proposed guidelines, which include several changes related to national security, was launched on Thursday and would wrap up on August 1. The proposals were shared months before the next Legco election on December 7, the second to be held since the process was overhauled to follow a 'patriots only' system. The changes include the disqualification of anyone convicted of offences that endanger national security from being nominated or elected as a lawmaker, in adherence to the city's existing national security legislation Members of the Election Committee who are convicted of the same offences are also barred from voting in the polls for the Election Committee constituency. Advertisement Election candidates will also be prohibited from sending by mail any publications that constitute a national security risk.

Hong Kong pet shop owner arrested for alleged theft of 35 cats to repay loan
Hong Kong pet shop owner arrested for alleged theft of 35 cats to repay loan

South China Morning Post

time5 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

Hong Kong pet shop owner arrested for alleged theft of 35 cats to repay loan

A Hong Kong pet shop owner has been arrested for the alleged theft of 35 of his customers' cats which he used to repay debts to a loan company, with the felines estimated to be valued at more than HK$623,000 (US$79,870), the Post has learned. The owner, surnamed Chan, 44, had a shop in Hung Hom, which also offered consignment and pet-sitting services, a source said on Thursday. The source said Chan took out a loan of HK$210,000 from a company in August last year. The firm demanded repayment on Monday but Chan, who could not pay, proposed offering the cats from two customers to cover part of the debt, the source said. The proposal was accepted by the company staff, who later took away the cats. Three Bengal cats, valued at HK$150,000, and 32 British Shorthairs and Ragdolls, valued at HK$473,300, were given away. The Bengal cats were owned by a woman, 57, who requested a pet-sitting service at the shop. The other cats belonged to a man, 54, who asked for a consignment service.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store