Hong Kong pro-democracy lawmaker arrested over phone grab by Staff Writers Hong Kong (AFP) May 5, 2018 Hong Kong pro-democracy lawmaker Ted Hui was arrested Saturday for common assault and access to a computer with dishonest intent over an incident last week in which he snatched a phone from a female civil servant. Hui had grabbed the phone from the woman in the Legislative Council and dashed into the men's toilet. The 36-year-old has since apologised and said he did it because he suspected the government was collecting personal information on lawmakers in breach of the Privacy Ordinance. Despite his apology, Hui has been denounced by government leaders and lawmakers and even sacked by his own party. Hui is the latest pro-democracy lawmaker to come under fire after six others were disqualified from the legislature. Pro-democracy lawmakers denounced his arrest as an overreaction. "The whole case has been blown (out) of proportion and you can't help thinking that the upcoming prosecution is actually persecution with the aim of ousting of one more democratic member of the local legislature, and this is not acceptable," said legislator Claudia Mo. She said that if Hui was convicted and sentenced to more than three months' jail he would automatically lose his seat. Six lawmakers including former protest leaders and independence activists were ousted from the legislature in 2016 for inserting protests into their oaths of office after an intervention by Beijing. After the disqualifications, the democrats lost their veto power and failed to regain it at by-elections in March.
Hong Kong youth groups reject PLA foot drill pressure Hong Kong (AFP) May 4, 2018 Hong Kong's military-style youth groups rejected Chinese foot drills at an annual flag raising ceremony Friday despite pressure to change their marching traditions inherited from the British colonial era. The groups had received requests from China's liaison office in Hong Kong in recent weeks to change their foot drills to follow those used by the People's Liberation Army, which has a garrison in the semi-autonomous city. It comes as Hong Kong's freedoms are under increasing pressure from an a ... read more
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