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Hong Kong: Judge Orders Hong Kong Government to Explain Blacklist of Falun Gong Practitioners (Photo)
(Clearwisdom.net, November 6, 2005) On November 4, Judge Michael
Hartmann of the Court of First Instance ruled in a written document that, based
on the public's interest, the Hong Kong Immigration Department must explain why
the four Falun Gong practitioners were put on a blacklist and denied entry to
Hong Kong, and when and which government official put them on the blacklist. The
hearing is still ongoing. On October 20, the Hong Kong High Court opened its first session in the case
in which Taiwanese Falun Gong practitioners were denied entry to Hong Kong and
were violently deported. Four Taiwanese Falun Gong practitioners and Hong Kong
Falun Gong spokesperson Kan Hung-cheung held an appeal before the court opened. In February, 2003, four Taiwanese Falun Gong practitioners were barred from
entering Hong Kong when they arrived to attend a Falun Dafa conference. They
were illegally deported. The four practitioners and Hong Kong Falun Dafa
Association spokesperson Kan Hung-cheung filed a judicial review of the incident
with the high court. They requested the Immigration Department to explain why
they were included on a "watch list". One of the plaintiffs, Taiwanese Falun Gong practitioner Ms. Theresa Chu
Woan-chyi, who is also an in-house lawyer with a US insurance company, was among
the nearly 80 Taiwanese Falun Gong practitioners who were violently deported in
February 2003 by the Hong Kong Immigration Department for "security
concerns". The Hong Kong Immigration Department said that she was also
included on an "Immigration Watch List". Ms. Chu said that the four Taiwanese practitioners were all well-educated.
Chu is an attorney, two practitioners are government officials, and the other
one is an engineer. None of them has any criminal record. The Hong Kong
government's so-called "security concerns" can hardly be justified. In
addition, all of them entered Hong Kong in 2001. Take Ms. Chu as an example. She
had entered Hong Kong in 2001 but was denied entry in June 2002. In January
2003, she was allowed to enter Hong Kong, but was barred from entering the city
again in February 2003. Paul Harris, legal counsel who represents the Falun Gong practitioners,
thinks that the Hong Kong government must have other reasons besides the
"security concerns" for barring Falun Gong practitioners from entering
the territory. He believes that the authorities created a blacklist ("watch
list") targeting Falun Gong practitioners. He requested that the government
release the watch list to the public and explain the rationale for compiling it.
Government counsel Daniel Fung Wah-kin SC opposed the request. He said that
should the judge order the release of security information, he would consider an
application for "public interest immunity" to refuse the release. Nonetheless, Judge Michael Hartmann of the Court of First Instance ruled in
the November 4, 2005 written document, that based on "public
interest", the Hong Kong Immigration Department must explain why the four
Taiwanese Falun Gong practitioners were included on the watch list and denied
entry to Hong Kong, and when and which government official put them on this
list.
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