"Hidden experts" will be able to decrypt devices in Hong Kong national security cases.

rss · SCMP 2026-03-24T15:41:53Z auto
Hong Kong authorities will be able to require external technicians or any "specified person" to decrypt electronic devices during national security investigations, and may penalize suspects who provide incorrect passwords or falsely claim to have forgotten them, the security chief told lawmakers. Secretary for Security Chris Tang Ping-keung emphasized on Tuesday that recent amendments to the national security law's implementation rules did not create new law enforcement powers. "These amendments have...
Hong Kong authorities will be able to demand that external technicians or any "specified person" decrypt electronic devices during national security investigations, and may punish suspects who provide incorrect passwords or falsely claim to have forgotten them, the security chief has told lawmakers. Secretary for Security Chris Tang Ping-keung emphasized on Tuesday that recent amendments to the national security law's implementation rules did not create new law enforcement powers. "These amendments have only improved some procedures and how we work; there are absolutely no newly added powers," Tang said. He and acting justice secretary Horace Cheung Kwok-kwan briefed lawmakers the day after the updated rules came into force via the government gazette. Lawmakers questioned provisions empowering police officers to request passwords for electronic devices or decryption methods, and to require a "specified person" to do so to exercise their search power. Secretary for Security, Chris Tang. Photo: Karma Lo. Elizabeth Quat, a legislator from the Democratic Alliance for the Betterment and Progress of Hong Kong, asked whether technicians – whom she called "hidden gurus" – working in computer shops could be called in to provide decryption services to police officers.

Translated from auto by translategemma:12b

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