China News  
SINO DAILY
Hong Kong businesses pledge closures as extradition anger builds
By Elaine YU, Jerome TAYLOR
Hong Kong (AFP) June 11, 2019

Influential former China news publisher caught in anti-graft net
Beijing (AFP) June 10, 2019 - The former publisher of a prominent Chinese newspaper known for its investigative reporting has been caught in China's widening anti-graft net.

Dai Zigeng, 56, is being investigated for "serious violations of discipline and law" -- a euphemism for corruption -- the Beijing municipal corruption watchdog announced in a statement Monday.

The statement didn't offer any details of alleged wrongdoings.

Dai was publisher of the Beijing News from 2006 to 2017. During his stint, the state-owned newspaper won a reputation for investigations exposing vaccine scandals, ill-treatment of the disabled and other social woes that are rarely highlighted by other Chinese media.

Dai, a communist party cadre, made headlines in 2013 after threatening to resign from his position at Beijing News in support of another critical publication, The Southern Weekly, that was protesting government censorship.

Dai previously worked at the party-owned Guangming Daily for nearly two decades, reporting from the restive northwestern region of Xinjiang and China's industrial hub, Guangzhou.

He joined a state-owned financing platform Beijing Cultural Investment Development Group, which invested in media and culture-related ventures after stepping down from the Beijing News in 2017.

The statement from the anti-graft watchdog didn't offer details on whether Dai was still employed as vice chairman of the company or whether the investigation is linked to Dai's time at Beijing News or his other roles.

Dai is part of a growing group of Communist Party cadres caught in President Xi Jinping's anti-graft campaign, which critics say has served as a way to remove the leader's political enemies.

Over one million officials have been punished so far during Xi's six-year tenure.

Scores of Hong Kong businesses have vowed to shut Wednesday and protesters have planned another mass rally outside the city's parliament as anger builds over the government's push to allow extraditions to China.

The financial hub was rocked by a huge protest march over the weekend -- the largest since the city's 1997 return to China -- as vast crowds called on authorities to scrap the Beijing-backed plan.

Many are fearful the proposed law will tangle people in the mainland's opaque courts and hammer Hong Kong's reputation as an international business hub.

Organisers of the march said more than a million people took to the streets on Sunday, but the record crowds have failed to sway chief executive Carrie Lam who has rejected calls to withdraw or delay the bill and warned opponents against committing "radical acts".

On Wednesday, lawmakers will begin the next debate on the bill in the city's legislature, which is dominated by Beijing loyalists. A final vote is expected on June 20.

Protest groups have vowed to stage a fresh rally outside the building Wednesday morning -- although it was not yet clear whether police would allow it to take place.

Organisers have billed the gathering as a "picnic" in a park next to the building, but cordons have been thrown up in the area while parliament itself is now surrounded by metal barriers and a heavy police presence.

A separate online petition calling on protesters to gather Tuesday evening and camp overnight outside parliament heightened tensions, with police stopping multiple young people for searches.

In the early hours of Monday, officers fought running battles with small groups of hardline protesters who had made similar plans to spend the night.

- Businesses shuttering -

Ahead of Wednesday's debate, business owners took to social media using a hashtag that translates as "#612strike" -- the date of the proposed action -- to announce solidarity closures.

A large chunk are mom-and-pop style stores and small businesses that are a key part of the city's economy, but which often eschew the city's raucous street politics.

By Tuesday morning, more than 100 businesses had declared plans to strike, ranging from coffee shops and restaurants to camera stores, toy shops, nail salons, yoga studios and even an adult entertainment store.

"Hong Kong was built by our various generations with hard work," wrote Meet Yoga studio on its Instagram account. "A Hong Kong without freedom -- how about we just wipe it off the map entirely and call it China?"

The city's major student unions said they would boycott classes to attend the rallies, while a string of other prominent unions in the transport, social work and teaching sectors either followed suit or encouraged members to attend.

- 'Radical acts' -

On Tuesday, Lam warned against strikes, a protest method that is not readily embraced in the business-centric city.

"I urge schools, parents, groups, corporations and unions to carefully consider, if they call for these radical acts, what good would it do for Hong Kong society and our youth?" RTHK quoted her as asking.

The proposed law would allow extraditions to any jurisdiction with which Hong Kong does not already have a treaty -- including mainland China.

Hong Kong's leaders say it is needed to plug loopholes and to stop the city being a sanctuary for fugitives, and that safeguards are in place to ensure that political critics of Beijing will not be targeted.

Many Hong Kongers have little faith in the government's assurances after years of heightened fears that a resurgent Beijing is trying to quash the city's unique freedoms and culture.

Massive pro-democracy demonstrations in 2014 failed to win any concessions while protest leaders have been imprisoned or banned from politics.

On Tuesday, New Zealand's top court stopped a murder suspect from being extradited to Shanghai in a landmark ruling that gave a scathing assessment of China's courts.

The Court of Appeal noted a culture of torture, forced confessions and months-long interrogations without lawyers in China's judicial system while defence counsels were often persecuted.

Opposition to extradition unites a wide cross-section of Hong Kong, including lawyers and legal bodies, business figures and chambers of commerce, journalists, activists and religious leaders.

The pastor of a usually pro-government mega-church issued a statement saying he could not support the bill while the Catholic diocese urged Lam -- a devout Catholic -- to delay the bill.

Western governments have also voiced alarm. The US this week warned the bill would put people at risk of "China's capricious judicial system".

China fired back Tuesday, with a foreign ministry official calling the comments "irresponsible and erroneous", adding that Beijing "resolutely opposes interference in Hong Kong affairs".


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SINO DAILY
New Zealand quashes China extradition over torture fears
Wellington (AFP) June 11, 2019
A New Zealand court on Tuesday stopped a murder suspect from being extradited to China, saying it could not send him to a country where torture was "widespread" and "systemic". The Court of Appeal quashed a ministerial decision to extradite Kyung Kim to China, saying to do so when there was a risk he would be tortured breached New Zealand's international obligations. The 99-page judgement, which included a damning assessment of Beijing's justice system, comes amid huge protests by Hong Kong resi ... read more

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