UK court convicts two men linked to Hong Kong trade office of spying

A British court has convicted two men connected to Hong Kong's London trade office of spying for Chinese authorities. Bill Yuen Chung-biu and Peter Wai Chi-leung were found guilty on Thursday of assisting a foreign intelligence service.

The convictions come two years after the men's arrests drew attention to Hong Kong's overseas offices. Yuen, a retired Hong Kong police superintendent and manager of the Hong Kong Economic and Trade Office in London, was accused of passing surveillance requests from Hong Kong authorities to Wai.

Wai, a United Kingdom Border Force officer, used his access to Home Office computer systems to collect personal details on Hong Kong activists living in the UK, prosecutors said.

A Hong Kong government spokesman stated that the case was “absolutely unrelated” to the administration or the London office. He added, “Nor are we party to the case,” and rejected any “unfounded allegations” against Hong Kong authorities.

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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.

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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.

Hong Kong police have arrested nine men aged 18 to 61 as part of a seven-jurisdiction operation that detained more than 300 suspects across Asia. The coordinated effort targeted the production, distribution, and possession of child sexual exploitation material. Local raids took place on April 14, with suspects accused of possessing child pornography and committing indecent assaults.

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On Wednesday, United States authorities charged Chinese nationals and companies in two separate cases with offenses including conspiring to smuggle advanced AI chips to China and drug trafficking with money laundering. One case involves smuggling American-made AI chips via Thailand, the other an alleged fentanyl supply chain.

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