John Lee vows ‘prudent’ use of power to define national security offences
Hong Kong Chief Executive John Lee Ka-chiu has pledged to use prudence and seriousness when defining national security offences under proposed new legislation. He stated this on Tuesday, aiming to dismiss concerns about a centralization of power.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedHong Kong Chief Executive John Lee Ka-chiu has pledged to use prudence and seriousness when defining national security offences under proposed new legislation. He stated this on Tuesday, aiming to dismiss concerns about a centralization of power. Lee emphasized that defining these offences involves "state players" and highly sensitive information. The subsidiary legislation introduces a classification mechanism for "other offences endangering national security," which he believes will bring greater clarity to the administration of justice. Under the proposed law, cases certified by the chief executive as involving national security will follow specific investigation, detention, and trial procedures, including stricter bail conditions and trials before designated judges.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
4 extractedThe process of defining national security offences often involves 'state players' and highly sensitive information.
Any case with a certificate from the chief executive confirming it involves national security would be subject to stricter investigation, detention, and trial procedures.
The subsidiary legislation introduces a classification mechanism for 'other offences endangering national security' under the city's domestic national security law.
Hong Kong leader John Lee pledged to exercise prudence and seriousness when defining national security offences under proposed legislation.