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 Verdict for HK spy journalist upheldBy XinhuaUpdated: 2006-11-24 13:55
 The Beijing Higher People's Court on Friday rejected Hong Kong journalist 
Ching Cheong's appeal and upheld his original five-year sentence for espionage. 
 
 
 
 Ching Cheong, who 
worked for Singapore's Straits Times newspaper, is also deprived of political 
rights for one year, and his personal property worth 300,000 yuan (about 
US$37,500) was confiscated.
 |  Singapore Straits Times journalist 
 Ching Cheong speaks at an event in Singapore in this April 2, 2005 file 
 photo. A Chinese court on November 24, 2006 upheld a guilty verdict 
 against the Hong Kong-based Singapore newspaper reporter who was sentenced 
 to prison for five years for spying. [Reuters]
 
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 The original verdict of the Beijing No. 2 
Intermediate People's Court in August was "a correct application of the law and 
provided appropriate punishment," said a judge with the Beijing Higher People's 
Court.
 The court fully guaranteed Ching's right of appeal, the judge said.
 
 According to the court, Ching had become acquainted with two people, 
surnamed Xue and Dai from a Taiwan foundation. The court learned the foundation 
was actually an espionage organization, and Xue and Dai were deputies, of which 
Ching was fully aware.
 
 The court heard that between May 2004 and April 
2005 Ching supplied Xue and Dai, through fax and email, with information 
involving state secrets and intelligence he had received from his contacts in 
Beijing. Ching accepted 300,000 HK dollars from the organization.
 
 A 
document released by the court during the first trial said the penalty was a 
mitigated one considering that after Ching Cheong was detained, he voluntarily 
confessed more espionage activities than those the state security departments 
had known.
 
 He also presented his notebook computer, which contained 
evidence of espionage, to the authorities, according to the document.
 
 The court document showed that Ching was born on December 3, 1949.
 
 After of the first trial of the case in August, Hong Kong Special 
Administrative Region Chief Executive Donald Tsang said his government must 
respect the "One Country, Two Systems" principle and not interfere in the law 
enforcement and the judicial process of the mainland, just as the mainland 
authorities will not interfere in the cases that fall within the jurisdiction of 
the Hong Kong SAR.
 
 
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