for treating
21 the acts in question--an orderly, lawful week-long protest
against the by the British and Chinese Governments, home their promises of instituting a democratically elected
legislature in Hong Kong;
The
3) the offence to be charged--a frequently violated but rarely
enforced clause that the Government itself has recognised
possibly violates the proposed Hong Kong Bill of Rights.
Government, moreover, has submitted to the United Nations Human
Rights Committee that it would only enforce the clause under
certain special circumstances.
4) the timing of the summonses--three months after the events in question but only two weeks before widespread demonstrations
commemorating the June 4 Beijing Massacre.
Members of the UDHK wish to make clear that, since the
case is now under consideration by the courts, they will not make
any comment on the merits of the case, nor will they in any way
of the west. attempt to influence the outcome
They will, however,
comment upon the decision of the Attorney General to prosecute,
contain
cus
the merits of Hong Kong laws, the implications for the Hong Kong Bill of Rights, and the political importance of the
case.
than
Only earlier this month, on 2 May, How Secretary for Constitutional Affairs, Michael Suen, released a list of statutes that were "possibly inconsistant" with the proposed Hong Kong
Bill of Rights. The Bill of Rights is a virtually verbatim copy
of most of the provisions of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, to which Britain is a signatory and which
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