CUHK alumni lose legal bid to overturn election ban

Two graduates of the Chinese University of Hong Kong have lost a court challenge against their disqualification from an election for the university's advisory body. The disqualifications stemmed from their pro-independence views and convictions related to the 2019 anti-government protests. Judge Russell Coleman ruled that the challenge was filed late and would not alter the outcome.

Two graduates of the Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK), Walter Tse Wai-lok and Anthony Suen Ho-yin, jointly applied for judicial review in November 2023. They challenged the university's decision to disqualify them from running in the convocation standing committee election held in February 2023. The disqualifications were based on their pro-independence views or convictions arising from the 2019 anti-government protests, which the standing committee deemed would bring the convocation into disrepute.

In a written judgment delivered on Friday, Mr Justice Russell Coleman ruled against the pair. He highlighted their failure to lodge the bid within three months of the disqualifications and the standing committee's lack of public functions that would justify judicial intervention.

Coleman noted that even if the challenge succeeded, it would not change the standing committee's conclusion about the pair's candidacy. "It seems to me – not least against the then prevailing political and social landscape – that no amount of supposed remorse or regret could have deflected the [standing committee’s] conclusion, which was and is based on the inherent nature and gravity of the conduct in question," the judge said.

He added that while Tse and Suen complained of no opportunity to make representations to the standing committee, they should have realized their prior convictions or pro-independence stance would raise concerns about their candidacy. The case underscores the cautious approach of Hong Kong universities toward politically sensitive issues.

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ECHR building in Strasbourg with lawyers exiting after rejection of Catalan leaders' detention review appeal.
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Strasbourg rejects review of ruling upholding pre-trial detention of Junqueras, Turull and Sànchez

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The European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) rejected on Monday the request by Oriol Junqueras, Jordi Turull and Jordi Sànchez for the Grand Chamber to review the November 2025 ruling upholding their pre-trial detention over the Catalan independence process. A panel of five judges denied the review, making the decision final and confirming no political motivations in their imprisonment. It rules that Spain did not violate their political rights or freedom of expression.

Three High Court judges in Hong Kong ruled Friday that former Tiananmen vigil leaders Lee Cheuk-yan and Chow Hang-tung have a case to answer on subversion charges, finding evidence they incited others to overthrow Communist Party leadership. This follows January pleas where co-defendant Albert Ho admitted guilt while the pair denied charges. The judges rejected a prosecution claim about unchanging party leadership as superficial.

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Hong Kong’s Court of Appeal dismissed appeals by 12 opposition activists on Monday, who sought to overturn their convictions or reduce sentences in the city’s largest national security trial to date. The court also upheld the acquittal of one of the 47 defendants, barrister Lawrence Lau, in the high-profile conspiracy to subvert state power case. The ruling came amid tight security at the West Kowloon Court.

A Hong Kong court has sentenced 69-year-old Kwok Yin-sang to eight months in prison for attempting to cash out an insurance policy belonging to his daughter, US-based activist Anna Kwok, in a ruling that breached national security law. This marks the first conviction of a family member of a wanted activist under such charges.

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Hong Kong's commerce minister Algernon Yau summoned the Panamanian consul general to express strong dissatisfaction with a court ruling annulling CK Hutchison Holdings' ports concession in the Panama Canal. Yau warned that the decision seriously undermines international trade rules and urged Panama to respect contracts and provide a fair business environment. The move follows Panama's Supreme Court stripping the rights last week.

Hong Kong's Securities and Futures Commission has secured court orders to freeze the assets of three individuals accused of insider trading. They include former HKEX listing division staffer Chan Ching-wa and relatives Lam Cho-man and Chau Chi-kwong, who allegedly used non-public information to trade shares between June 2020 and March 2025. The measures involve injunctions in Hong Kong and the UK.

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One week after South Korea's judicial reform laws took effect on March 12—introducing constitutional appeals and penalties for 'law distortion'—complaints against top judges have risen sharply. The National Assembly is set to vote Thursday on the remaining two bills of the 'judiciary trio,' prompting fears of paralyzing the judiciary.

 

 

 

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