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"If people wearing black committed any criminal offences, and you bring them to justice, that's fair. But why don't you do the same when the criminals are wearing white?" – Hong Kong's lawyers took this question to the streets on Aug 7. https://t.co/7kE7VVdh5E #hongkongprotests pic.twitter.com/Uo6aszJUnk
— South China Morning Post (@SCMPNews) August 7, 2019
Lawyers in a silent march to the justice secretary’s office to call for an independent commission of inquiry and the independence of government prosecutors.
Protests by the legal community are less uncommon these days under creeping authoritarianism in Hong Kong. pic.twitter.com/8vCyEkOI3T
— Elaine Yu (@yuenok) August 7, 2019
WATCH: Lawyers dressed in black join a silent march as Hong Kong faces weekly protests #香港 #反送中 pic.twitter.com/gUYfjz0DXH
— Bloomberg Originals (@bbgoriginals) August 7, 2019
WATCH: Hong Kong lawyers held a silent march today, calling for an independent inquiry into how police dealt with anti-government protesters. @WeiDuCNA has more on the lawyers’ concerns https://t.co/C4hTBoO478 pic.twitter.com/eIUMRUMrm4
— CNA (@ChannelNewsAsia) August 7, 2019
WATCH: Hong Kong lawyers held a silent march today, calling for an independent inquiry into how police dealt with anti-government protesters. @WeiDuCNA has more on the lawyers’ concerns https://t.co/C4hTBoO478 pic.twitter.com/eIUMRUMrm4
— CNA (@ChannelNewsAsia) August 7, 2019
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