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Hong Kong woman handed suspended jail sentence for online posts inciting others to cast invalid ballots in district council election

  • Yeung Sze-wing, 51, sentenced to two months in jail but term is suspended for two years owing to guilty plea and ‘other mitigating factors’
  • She was one of three arrested by anti-corruption watchdog on election day last December

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The ICAC headquarters in North Point. The anti-corruption watchdog arrested three people on election day last December for inciting others to cast invalid votes. Photo: Jelly Tse

A 51-year-old clerk has been handed a suspended jail sentence over online posts inciting others to cast invalid ballots in Hong Kong’s district council election last year.

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Yeung Sze-wing, one of three arrested by the anti-corruption watchdog on December 10 when residents headed to the polls, pleaded guilty at Eastern Court on Monday to one count of engaging in illegal conduct by inciting others to cast invalid votes during an election period.

Principal Magistrate Ivy Chui Yee-mei sentenced Yeung to two months in jail but suspended the sentence for two years owing to her guilty plea and “other mitigating factors”.

Election staff sort through votes at a counting station in Causeway Bay last December. Photo: Dickson Lee
Election staff sort through votes at a counting station in Causeway Bay last December. Photo: Dickson Lee

Yeung’s offence was “serious in nature” as it “undermined the fairness of an election”, Chui said in a press release from the Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC).

Yeung was charged under an amendment to the Elections (Corrupt and Illegal Conduct) Ordinance that took effect in May 2021 as part of a broader Beijing-led electoral overhaul designed to ensure only “patriots” held power in the city.

As part of that revamp, directly elected seats in the district councils were cut from 452 to 88 and hopefuls were required to secure backing from three community associations.

The nomination process started on October 17, but no opposition hopefuls secured enough nominations to run. The remaining seats were chosen by the chief executive and the three neighbourhood committees.

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