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Hong Kong student leader Wong in court bid over vote rules
by Staff Writers
Hong Kong (AFP) Oct 12, 2015


Hong Kong photographer to face Thai trial over flak jacket
Samut Prakan, Thailand (AFP) Oct 12, 2015 - A Hong Kong photographer detained in Thailand for carrying a bulletproof jacket and helmet will face trial after pleading not guilty on Monday to a weapons possession charge.

The case has sparked an outcry from media freedom groups, who say journalists should not be punished for carrying body armour and protective gear in and out of dangerous zones.

Anthony Kwan Hok-chun, who works for the Hong Kong-based Initium media group, was briefly held on August 23 after trying to depart Bangkok's Suvarnabhumi airport with a flak jacket and helmet in his hand luggage.

Both items are classified as weapons under Thai law and Kwan was charged with breaching the Arms Control Act -- punishable by up to five years in jail.

He was in Thailand to cover the aftermath of August's deadly Bangkok bombing.

Kwan told reporters on Monday after the hearing at the Samut Prakan provincial court, near Bangkok, that he denied the charge.

"I'm not confessing... I don't think that a flak jacket is a weapon and I definitely didn't know it was illegal here," he said.

His plea means he will face a trial starting next month. The court granted Kwan bail and his lawyer later said he was free to leave the kingdom until the trial.

"I think everyone in my situation would be a little bit concerned. I'm preparing for the worst but hoping for the best," Kwan added.

Thailand's classification of protection equipment as a weapon that requires a license has been criticised by media groups, who say they are vital pieces of kit for reporters in a country where political violence routinely spills onto the streets.

Around 10 campaigners, mostly journalists, on Monday rallied in Hong Kong outside a building that houses Thailand's consulate calling for the case against Kwan to be dropped.

"This (his arrest) was unreasonable. Journalists face all kinds of situations and sometimes it can be dangerous. Anthony carried a bulletproof vest to protect himself and he was not the first one to do so," Ho Ka-tat, vice chairman of the Hong Kong Press Photographers Association, told AFP.

The Foreign Correspondents' Club of Thailand in a statement late Sunday also expressed disappointment at the charge.

"Thai authorities should consult with the media community... to explore a way around the 1987 law, which was surely not intended to prosecute journalists carrying out their normal duties," the statement said.

Hong Kong student leader Joshua Wong launched a court bid Monday demanding the age limit for candidates to stand for election in the city be lowered from 21 to 18.

Democracy activist Wong launched the bid on the eve of his 19th birthday and said if it was passed he would consider running for the city's de facto parliament.

The teenager became the face of the Umbrella Movement protests for fully free leadership elections, which brought parts of the city to a standstill at the end of last year.

Despite the rallies, authorities in Beijing and Hong Kong refused to budge on political reform.

Since then Wong has said activists must turn to longer term strategies to bring change.

"I wish to tackle the current system through judicial review, and to call for more young people to participate in politics more comprehensively," he said in a statement Monday after filing an application for judicial review at the city's High Court.

Hong Kong residents can vote from the age of 18, but can only stand for office from the age of 21, something that Wong says is unconstitutional.

The current rules "were preventing us from our rights as promised according to human rights laws and the Basic Law (the city's constitution)", he said.

Wong added that it was necessary for the younger generation to be eligible to stand in order to challenge the "conservative political culture" of the pan-democrats currently in the legislature and to push for self-determination for Hong Kong.

The semi-autonomous city was returned to China by Britain in 1997 and is ruled under a "one country, two systems" deal which allows it much greater freedoms than seen on the mainland.

But there are fears that Beijing's influence is increasing and freedoms are being eroded.

Last year's mass protests were sparked after Beijing said candidates for the city's next leader must be vetted by a loyalist committee ahead of a public vote.

There have also been recent smaller protests over political interference in Hong Kong's education system after a liberal law scholar, who had supported the democracy movement, was rejected from a university post.

Some activists have been charged over their involvement in the democracy protests.

Wong faces a number of charges and is due to appear in court twice this month in separate protest-related cases.


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