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The Weekly Round-up: Hong Kong, data privacy, and pensions equality

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Sam Sykes and Conor Monighan provide the latest updates in human rights law

In the news

This week marked the 70th anniversary of the Community Party’s rule in China. In Hong Kong, there were violent protests and clashes with the police. The unrest which began in the wake of the controversial extradition bill introduced 4 months ago has developed into a wider movement for democracy, and there is no resolution in sight. The situation has caused damage to buildings and transportation infrastructure, and serious injuries: this week, an 18-year-old was shot in the chest – police say that he is now recovering.

Carrie Lam, the Chief Executive of Hong Kong, invoked the Emergency Powers Ordinance to try and create order. It is the first time in 50 years that such regulations have been created. The regulations ban people from wearing face masks, which protesters use to protect themselves from tear gas, and also to preserve their anonymity. Although many have ignored the rule, the Hong Kong authorities are now bringing the first charges under the new law.  

Meanwhile, Brexit uncertainty continues. Joanna Cherry and her fellow MPs, fresh from the success of their legal challenge to the government’s attempt to prorogue, have begun preparations for a legal challenge if the government refuse to comply with the Benn law, which requires the Prime Minister to request an extension to Article 50. The government’s written response to the claim indicates that it will obey the law and request an extension, but government ministers, and the Prime Minister himself, continue to suggest they may have a way around it.

A range of other important challenges are being brought against the government and public authorities.

In other legal developments in the UK, Scotland has become the first country in the UK to introduce a ‘smacking ban’. By removing the defence of ‘justifiable assault’, the Scottish Parliament has made it a criminal offence to apply force to a child. The move has been criticised by the Scottish Conservatives, but was strongly supported by the Association of Educational Psychologists. A similar bill is working its way through the Welsh Assembly.  

Outside the UK, the jurisdictional problem of the internet has been a prominent topic. The CJEU ruled this week in Case C-18/18 Eva Glawischnig-Piesczek v Facebook Ireland Limited that member states may legitimately make worldwide takedown orders against online platforms, where this relates to posts that are ‘equivalent or identical’ to content found to be illegal. The ruling comes in an online defamation case brought by an Austrian Green Party politician against Facebook. This poses an interesting counterpoint to the ruling last week in Case C-507/17 Google v CNIL, where the CJEU held that Google is not required to apply the ‘right to be forgotten’ on all its domains, as its underlying data protection obligations only apply within the EU.  

In other news

In the courts:

On the UKHRB

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