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Democratic Party to raise Hong Kong police’s Occupy handling and plight of domestic helpers at UN torture hearing

Police brutality and inadequate oversight of officers will be highlighted by party, lawmaker says

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Democratic Party lawmaker Emily Lau Wai-hing. Photo: Felix Wong

Allegations of police brutality and inadequate oversight of the force, screening of asylum seekers and the plight of foreign domestic helpers will top the agenda when a delegation of NGOs and political activists makes a presentation to a United Nations committee next week.

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The UN Committee Against Torture will hold a two-day hearing next week to discuss how Hong Kong and mainland China are implementing the Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishments.

"[The committee] has no power to threaten or order the SAR government to do anything … but if the government refuses to implement any [of the committee's recommendations], it would need to give an explanation," said Democratic Party chairwoman Emily Lau Wai-hing as she prepared to go to Geneva.

READ MORE: Police fire tear gas as Occupy Central spreads and ranks of protesters swell

Among the recommendations the Hong Kong government had repeatedly ignored, Lau said, was a call to set up an independent body to investigate complaints against police.

The UN committee will hear from both the Beijing and Hong Kong governments before non-governmental groups present their findings.

In its report to the committee, Lau's party dubs the government's efforts to implement the convention "feeble, haphazard and insufficient". It points to the response to last year's Occupy protests as one issue.

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"We urge the committee to ask the HKSAR government to conduct an independent inquiry to find out why 87 rounds of tear gas were fired at peaceful demonstrators, and why excessive force was used on peaceful demonstrators and journalists," the party's report reads.

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