NewsBite

Hong Kong man jailed for importing ‘seditious’ children’s books

Finance company worker Kurt Leung, 38, was sentenced to four months in prison after he pleaded guilty.

Activists rally against the new national security law on July 1, 2020. Picture: AFP
Activists rally against the new national security law on July 1, 2020. Picture: AFP

A Hong Kong man was sentenced to jail on Friday after importing “seditious” children’s books that portrayed the city’s democracy supporters as sheep defending their village from wolves.

Following massive democracy protests in the city in 2019, authorities have revived a colonial-era sedition offence to jail dozens of residents, which critics have decried as political suppression.

Finance company worker Kurt Leung, 38, was sentenced to four months in prison after he pleaded guilty to “importing ­seditious publications” — the first known conviction of its kind in ­recent years.

One of the books fictionalised the closure of pro-democracy newspaper Apple Daily and told a story similar to The Emperor’s New Clothes where truth-telling sheep were punished, the court heard on Friday.

Prosecutors said Mr Leung and his boss worked together to import 18 picture books – in three sets of six – from Britain via mail. Mr Leung took receipt of the delivery at their office address and was arrested on March 13.

The books spread “twisted values and inaccurate messages” to children by painting Beijing as the “evil and barbaric invader”, chief magistrate Victor So said in his ruling. “If seditious thoughts were to take root in the younger generation, those thoughts may grow and the effect may spread across generations,” Mr So said.

“Any sensible person can tell that the books are seditious.”

Defence lawyer Anson Wong told the court there was no evidence the books were distributed or that Mr Leung had seditious ­intent. “The books objectively had the intention, but the defendant subjectively did not,” he said.

In a letter to the court, Mr Leung offered “sincere apologies” but the chief magistrate said the sentence must have an element of deterrence.

The crime of importing seditious publication carries a maximum penalty of two years’ jail for first-time offenders. In recent years, the sedition offence has often been used by Hong Kong prosecutors in parallel with a sweeping national security law that Beijing imposed in 2020.

Sedition cases often involved defendants with no public profile, in contrast to security law cases which mostly target well-known activists and politicians. In September 2022, the original creators of the sheep village series were each jailed for 19 months in a ­separate sedition prosecution.

AFP

Add your comment to this story

To join the conversation, please Don't have an account? Register

Join the conversation, you are commenting as Logout

Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/world/hk-man-jailed-for-importing-seditious-childrens-books/news-story/489e944ee88588fda2a4e6249e3aaa8f