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Taiwan: Practitioners Sue Hong Kong Government; Mainland Affairs Council Will Provide Necessary Assistance (Clearwisdom.net) The first trial regarding fundamental human right
across the Straits was held in the Hong Kong Supreme Court on March 5. Regarding
the request of four plaintiffs from Taiwan and Hong Kong for judicial
examination on the Immigration Department's denying entrance and forcing
deportation, Justice Hartmann of the Supreme Court convened the four-day trial.
This case has been through four years of procedural examination and is now in
the final period of the actual trial. In the first day's court investigation,
senior lawyer Paul Harris, SC, attorney for the plaintiffs, and Justice Hartmann
all mentioned that Falun Gong has been persecuted in China and the evidence that
the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) created a "blacklist" of Falun Gong
practitioners and put pressure on the governments of other countries. According to a report on March 2, 2007, by Central Radio Station of Taiwan,
nearly 100 Falun Gong practitioners from Taiwan went to Hong Kong to attend a
Falun Gong-related event in 2003. Over 80 of them were deported by the Hong Kong
government. Five practitioners from both Taiwan and Hong Kong then sued the Hong
Kong Government. The case was tried on March 5. Liu Te-hsun, the Deputy Chief
Officer of Mainland Affairs Council, indicated that religious freedom and
freedom of belief are fundamental to any democratic country. As matter of fact,
the Hong Kong Government did not then protect the rights of the Taiwanese
people. The Mainland Affairs Council will provide the Taiwanese people necessary
assistance. Liu Te-hsun said that the Hong Kong government should realize that relations
between the governments of Hong Kong and Taiwan will, to some extent, be
influenced by individual cases. Therefore, he wished that the Hong Kong
government would protect the rights of people from Taiwan and pay more attention
to their safety during their stay in Hong Kong. Liu Te-hsun stressed that the Mainland Affairs Council would ask the Taiwan
Liaison Office in Hong Kong to watch the progress of the trial and provide
necessary assistance.
Posting date: 3/8/2007 |