Introducing extradition law in Hong Kong : erupting the latent

The month of June this year (2019) is a month of protests and strikes in Hong Kong. This is one of the biggest street protests since the return of Hong Kong to China. Even business people who usually pledge their support for the establishment and central government threw in their support in striking...

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Main Author: Lau, Zhe Wei
Format: Proceeding Paper
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://irep.iium.edu.my/77142/
http://irep.iium.edu.my/77142/1/77142_INTRODUCING%20EXTRADITION%20LAW%20IN%20HONG%20KONG_new.pdf
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author Lau, Zhe Wei
author_facet Lau, Zhe Wei
author_sort Lau, Zhe Wei
building IIUM Repository
collection Online Access
description The month of June this year (2019) is a month of protests and strikes in Hong Kong. This is one of the biggest street protests since the return of Hong Kong to China. Even business people who usually pledge their support for the establishment and central government threw in their support in striking this time. This is due to Hong Kong government's decision to introduce an extradition law which allows “other governments” (including Mainland China) to request for their suspects to be charged in their countries. One of the main concerns of the protesters is the possibility of anyone physically in Hong Kong be sent to China for their judicial trial should China request for it. With the long sour relationship between the anti-China (anti-establishment) segment of the society and the mainland Chinese government, this development, although does not come as a surprise, but the scale this time does. This paper will study on: i) what makes this segment of the society feel displeasure towards the mainland Chinese government in general since the return of Hong Kong to mainland China; ii) what are the causes for this political chaos to occur so terribly with this extradition law; iii) to what extend the power of the people can force the government to please their wills. Although there will not be on-the-ground in depth study for this writing, but with the help of modern technology and free flow of information in this era, arm-chair approach will be used instead. The method applied to analyse this writing is mainly qualitative through primary (such as official report and official press conference) and secondary (such as media reporting, reliable video postings and alike) sources.
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spelling iium-771422020-10-06T08:03:29Z http://irep.iium.edu.my/77142/ Introducing extradition law in Hong Kong : erupting the latent Lau, Zhe Wei JA Political science (General) The month of June this year (2019) is a month of protests and strikes in Hong Kong. This is one of the biggest street protests since the return of Hong Kong to China. Even business people who usually pledge their support for the establishment and central government threw in their support in striking this time. This is due to Hong Kong government's decision to introduce an extradition law which allows “other governments” (including Mainland China) to request for their suspects to be charged in their countries. One of the main concerns of the protesters is the possibility of anyone physically in Hong Kong be sent to China for their judicial trial should China request for it. With the long sour relationship between the anti-China (anti-establishment) segment of the society and the mainland Chinese government, this development, although does not come as a surprise, but the scale this time does. This paper will study on: i) what makes this segment of the society feel displeasure towards the mainland Chinese government in general since the return of Hong Kong to mainland China; ii) what are the causes for this political chaos to occur so terribly with this extradition law; iii) to what extend the power of the people can force the government to please their wills. Although there will not be on-the-ground in depth study for this writing, but with the help of modern technology and free flow of information in this era, arm-chair approach will be used instead. The method applied to analyse this writing is mainly qualitative through primary (such as official report and official press conference) and secondary (such as media reporting, reliable video postings and alike) sources. 2019-10 Proceeding Paper NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en http://irep.iium.edu.my/77142/1/77142_INTRODUCING%20EXTRADITION%20LAW%20IN%20HONG%20KONG_new.pdf Lau, Zhe Wei (2019) Introducing extradition law in Hong Kong : erupting the latent. In: International Conference On Religion, Governance And Sustainable Development (ICRGD2019), 16th-17th October 2019, Gombak, Kuala Lumpur. (Unpublished)
spellingShingle JA Political science (General)
Lau, Zhe Wei
Introducing extradition law in Hong Kong : erupting the latent
title Introducing extradition law in Hong Kong : erupting the latent
title_full Introducing extradition law in Hong Kong : erupting the latent
title_fullStr Introducing extradition law in Hong Kong : erupting the latent
title_full_unstemmed Introducing extradition law in Hong Kong : erupting the latent
title_short Introducing extradition law in Hong Kong : erupting the latent
title_sort introducing extradition law in hong kong : erupting the latent
topic JA Political science (General)
url http://irep.iium.edu.my/77142/
http://irep.iium.edu.my/77142/1/77142_INTRODUCING%20EXTRADITION%20LAW%20IN%20HONG%20KONG_new.pdf