Hong Kong Court Rejects Bid to Terminate Sedition Trial of Stand News

Hong Kong Court Rejects Bid to Terminate Sedition Trial of Stand News
Former Stand News editor-in-chief Chung Pui-kuen leaves the court after release on bail over his charge of conspiring to publish "Seditious Publications" in Hong Kong on Dec. 13, 2022. (Tyrone Siu/Reuters)
Reuters
12/23/2022
Updated:
12/23/2022

HONG KONG—A Hong Kong Court on Thursday rejected an application to terminate a sedition trial against now-defunct online pro-democracy media outlet Stand News, a case that could see two former top editors jailed if convicted.

Former editors Chung Pui-kuen, 53, and Patrick Lam, 35, and the outlet’s parent company, Best Pencil (Hong Kong) Limited, have been charged with conspiracy to publish seditious material related to news articles and commentaries between July 2020 and December last year.

They have pleaded not guilty and are free on bail. Sedition is punishable by a maximum two years jail.

Defense lawyers Audrey Eu and David Ma applied to terminate the proceedings arguing the National Security Department had improperly handled evidence related to scores of additional articles prosecutors have cited as seditious since the trial began.

But District Court Judge Kwok Wai-kin said the defense could not prove that the prosecution had failed to disclose relevant material in a way that would compromise the fairness of the trial, or would “abuse the court procedures in future hearings.”

Stand News was forced to shut, and took down all their online content after police raided its office and arrested seven former editorial staff and board members in December 2021.

Stand News is one of several media outlets, including the Apple Daily newspaper, that have been shuttered since the Chinese regime imposed a national security law on Hong Kong in June 2020. Media rights advocacy group Reporters without Borders said the city’s media freedom ranking fell in 2022 to 148th out of 180 countries and territories, from 80th in 2021.