Book contents
- Ho Chi Minh in Hong Kong
- Ho Chi Minh in Hong Kong
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Acknowledgments
- Note on the Text
- Chronology
- Acronyms
- Introduction
- 1 Setting Up in Hong Kong and Arrest
- 2 Early Life in France and Move Back to Asia
- 3 The Parallel Case of Tan Malaka
- 4 In Revolutionary Guangzhou
- 5 Mounting the Defense
- 6 Legal Process
- 7 Media Coverage of the Arrest and Trial
- 8 The French Diplomatic Démarche
- 9 The Privy Council Verdict, Release and Afterlife
- Epilogue
- Appendix: Dramatis Personae
- Bibliography
- Index
9 - The Privy Council Verdict, Release and Afterlife
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 July 2021
- Ho Chi Minh in Hong Kong
- Ho Chi Minh in Hong Kong
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Acknowledgments
- Note on the Text
- Chronology
- Acronyms
- Introduction
- 1 Setting Up in Hong Kong and Arrest
- 2 Early Life in France and Move Back to Asia
- 3 The Parallel Case of Tan Malaka
- 4 In Revolutionary Guangzhou
- 5 Mounting the Defense
- 6 Legal Process
- 7 Media Coverage of the Arrest and Trial
- 8 The French Diplomatic Démarche
- 9 The Privy Council Verdict, Release and Afterlife
- Epilogue
- Appendix: Dramatis Personae
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
This chapter retraces the appeal made by Ho Chi Minh's legal team to the Privy Council in London in an attempt to cancel a Hong Kong Governor-in-Council order to return him to a French jurisdiction. Drawing upon British and French documentation, the chapter explains the out-of-court settlement in his favor but also intramural government maneuverings and even incompetence in the handling of his case: Ho Chi Minh's thwarted attempt to reach England, an aborted trip to Singapore and, with local Hong Kong legal assistance, his anticlimactic final departure from Hong Kong to Shanghai. A range of documentation is brought to bear upon, for example, faux reports of Ho Chi Minh's death, his journey to Moscow and communist recriminations over his Hong Kong interlude.
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- Ho Chi Minh in Hong KongAnti-Colonial Networks, Extradition and the Rule of Law, pp. 206 - 225Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021