The Limited Times

Now you can see non-English news...

The prosecutor accused Tan Dezhi of being involved in hate speech, alleging that Tan had called "Recover Hong Kong" and other slogans

2020-09-08T09:21:14.557Z


The Vice Chairman of the People’s Forces "Quabi" Tan Dezhi was accused of placing street stations in different places in Hong Kong in March and July of this year and calling out slogans such as "Recover Hong Kong" and "Black Police Kill the Whole Family" in order to arouse opposition to the government. Hate, cause dissatisfaction among Hong Kong residents, and counsel others to violate the law. He was therefore charged with five counts of publishing sedition and one count of disrupting order in a public place. The case will appear in Fanling Magistrates' Courts today (8th). The prosecution requested to refuse Tan's bail, and the court is still processing.


Social News

Written by: Li Huina

2020-09-08 17:11

Last update date: 2020-09-08 17:11

The Vice Chairman of the People’s Forces "Quabi" Tan Dezhi was accused of placing street stations in different places in Hong Kong in March and July of this year and calling out slogans such as "Recover Hong Kong" and "Black Police Kill the Whole Family" in order to arouse opposition to the government. Hate, cause dissatisfaction among Hong Kong residents, and counsel others to violate the law.

He was therefore charged with five counts of publishing sedition and one count of disrupting order in a public place. The case will appear in Fanling Magistrates' Courts today (8th).

The prosecution requested to refuse Tan's bail, and the court is still processing.

The defendant, Tan Dezhi (48 years old), reportedly host the radio station.

The charge alleges that in March and July this year, Tan was in various locations including Sai Yeung Choi Street and Argyle Street in Mong Kok, outside Wong Tai Sin MTR Station, Kwun Tong MTR Station, Lam Tin Kai Tin Shopping Centre and Ngau Tau Kok Lower Village Shopping Centre. The publication of seditious words means words intended to arouse hatred or contempt of the Hong Kong government, or to provoke rebellion against them, or to cause dissatisfaction or rebellion among Hong Kong residents, or to counsel others to not abide by the law.

Tan Yishen was charged with inciting middle school students to participate in the assembly two days later when he participated in the assembly of the middle school in the Tai Po District earlier this year. The case was brought to court in July this year. He was only accused of inciting others to participate in the assembly without approval. .

The prosecution had stated at that time that it would add two additional charges. The prosecution revealed for the first time that the two charges were for publishing seditious writing and committing disorderly conduct in public places. The three crimes are now being dealt with in the same case.

The case accused him of inciting unknown persons to participate in an unauthorized procession assembly at the Tai Po Waterfront Park Amphitheater on January 17 this year and publishing sedition.

He was also charged with using a microphone and leading a crowd outside the Shung Kwong Department Store in Causeway Bay on January 19 this year, and verbally cursing police officers.

The prosecution revealed in the court that Tan had issued and suspected illegal slogans, including: "721 don't see people, 831 kill people, October 1 shoot and kill people", "the five major demands, one is indispensable", "disband the police force" Wait.

Case No.: FLCC1466, 1691/2020, FLS5688, FLS5689/2020

"Quiebi" Tan Dezhishe was arrested for publishing seditious text: Propaganda content aroused hatred of the government

Kuaibi Tan Dezhi was fined 3000 yuan for kicking "Dabo Man" in the fundraising event

"Quiebi" Tan Dezhi was arrested by the police today and charged with 3 crimes in Fanling Magistracy today

Tan Dezhi Free Speech Hong Kong Version National Security Law Court

Source: hk1

All news articles on 2020-09-08

You may like

Trends 24h

Latest

© Communities 2019 - Privacy

The information on this site is from external sources that are not under our control.
The inclusion of any links does not necessarily imply a recommendation or endorse the views expressed within them.