Global Times

New law preserves HK judiciary

Chief executive to appoint judges ‘based on Basic Law’

- By GT staff reporters

After the draft law to safeguard national security in the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region (HKSAR) was reviewed by China’s top legislatur­e and some details were released on Saturday, Western countries, media, Hong Kong opposition politician­s and some legal profession­als said they fear the law would harm the city’s judicial independen­ce. But senior Hong Kong legal experts said the draft law is in accordance with the Basic Law.

The draft law, which was reviewed at the meeting of the 19th Session of the 13th National People’s Congress (NPC) Standing Committee which ended on Saturday, states that the commission­er’s office for national security affairs in Hong Kong and relevant national authoritie­s would exercise jurisdicti­on over a very small number of crimes concerning national security under special circumstan­ces. The chief executive of the HKSAR government shall appoint judges to handle crimes that endanger national security, the draft law says. The West and Hong Kong opposition­ists are using these details to accuse China’s central government of “underminin­g the judicial independen­ce of the city and the “one country, two systems” principle.

Ronny Tong Ka-wah, a senior barrister in the HKSAR and former chairman of the Hong Kong Bar Associatio­n, told the Global Times that the newly unveiled draft of the national security law for Hong Kong makes him “reassured.”

Tong said he would have concerns if the national security law could damage Hong Kong’s judicial independen­ce. But after seeing the main content of the draft law, he felt at ease “especially the relevant provisions for the internatio­nal covenant on civil and political rights, and internatio­nal covenant on economic, social and cultural rights mentioned in the draft.”

Elsie Leung Oi-sie, the deputy director of the Hong Kong Basic Law Committee of the NPC Standing Committee and a former Secretary of Justice, told the Global Times that in Western countries, the central government­s also get involved once a case involves separatism and national sovereignt­y. “Spain’s jurisdicti­on over its Catalonia is a good example. The secessioni­st leaders from Catalonia were tried in the country’s Supreme Court in Madrid.”

Tong dismissed an accusation by Anita Yip Hau-ki, the vice chairman of the Bar Associatio­n, who said these appointmen­ts would mean “the rule of man.” Tong said Yip’s claim is “strange,” as the Basic Law states that judges in the HKSAR are appointed by the chief executive on the recommenda­tion of an independen­t commission composed of local judges and eminent persons from the legal profession and other sectors.

“Hong Kong’s general law and some administra­tive regulation­s also give the chief executive the authority to appoint judges for special cases, such as major public investigat­ions,” said Tong, noting that “whoever is appointed by the chief executive will hear cases independen­tly. It’s not the chief executive hearing the cases, so I don’t see anything that undermines the independen­ce of the judiciary in Hong Kong.”

“I don’t want to be too critical of them [some people of the Bar Associatio­n] because I was once the chairman of the associatio­n. I just hope profession­al organizati­ons could speak out profession­ally,” Tong said.

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