South China Morning Post

MOVE ‘TO EXTEND PAST ORIGINAL 4 OFFENCES IN LAW’

Legal experts predict interpreta­tion by Beijing will bar foreign lawyers from dealing with client assets or from defending charges of sedition

- Chris Lau and Jeffie Lam Additional reporting by Rachel Yeo

Foreign lawyers will be barred from dealing with assets involved in cases relating to the national security law, or defending clients in sedition trials, once Beijing has granted a legal interpreta­tion sought by the Hong Kong government on the legislatio­n, experts based locally and beyond have predicted.

The forecast points to a far wider scope than previously thought as underscore­d in the case of media tycoon Jimmy Lai Chee-ying, whose bid to hire British King’s Counsel Timothy Owen has prompted the Hong Kong government to seek a clarificat­ion from Beijing.

Since the latest political storm erupted, Chief Executive John Lee Ka-chiu has described the request as a matter of great importance under national security, saying the present mechanism has failed to put in place a safeguard that shields lawyers registered overseas from undue influence from their own country, which may be hostile towards the city. Their access to state secrets was also a concern, Lee said.

A day after he filed the request to Beijing, Lee yesterday instructed Secretary for Justice Paul Lam Ting-kwok to ask the court to adjourn Lai’s trial, originally slated for tomorrow, for a week pending the latest developmen­t.

Lai’s case is concerned mostly with charges of collusion with foreign forces, one of four offences under the national security law, with the other three being secession, subversion and terrorism.

But several legal experts whom the Post spoke to have concluded – or at least left open the possibilit­y – that if Beijing ended up banning foreign lawyers from arguing in national security cases, it could go beyond the four offences.

“The Hong Kong court has explained in the past that crimes endangerin­g national security have gone beyond the four offences,” Albert Chen Hung-yee, a legal scholar at the University of Hong Kong (HKU), said.

As an example, Chen cited the sedition offence, a colonial-era charge prosecutor­s have been pressing. Under this charge, defendants have been subjected to the same higher standard faced by those in national security law cases in applying for bail.

Chen said a possible ban on foreign lawyers would apply to litigation arising from the freezing of assets in national security cases because they were “of course under the national security law”.

“It’s not clear how far new limits on participat­ion of foreign counsel will extend. It’s possible that foreign counsel will be barred from all aspects of national security law cases, and even from participat­ion in sedition cases, which are emerging as a sort of national security law-lite type offence,” said Thomas Kellogg, executive director of the Centre for Asian Law at Georgetown University in the United States, who studies the situation affecting Hong Kong.

Michael Davis, a fellow at the Woodrow Wilson Internatio­nal Centre in Washington, also raised concerns, pointing to how the national security law has been used in both civil and criminal matters.

“We should be concerned about the business environmen­t as well. If a firm is advising clients on doing business in Hong Kong, they will presumably have to advise them that they may lose the benefit of their usual legal team if a national security matter is raised. Would such a firm be nervous about even doing business in the city?” the former HKU law professor said.

But Hong Kong Senior Counsel Ronny Tong Ka-wah, who is a member of the government’s advisory Executive Council, stressed that it was important for the chief executive to clarify the matter with Beijing.

“If a Hong Kong lawyer has violated the national security law or failed to meet the requiremen­ts, the [Bar Associatio­n or the Law Society] can follow up and they will investigat­e and punish the lawyers practising in Hong Kong,” Tong said.

“But if they are lawyers from outside, they do not belong to these two bodies and can go back to Britain after working on a case. I don’t think it’s possible to follow up, investigat­e or even punish them if problems arise.”

What remained unanswered, however, was which exact provision should the National People’s Congress (NPC) Standing Committee, China’s top legislativ­e body, be interpreti­ng.

Ex-HKU scholar Johannes Chan Man-mun said the national security law lacked a provision on foreign lawyers. “The standing committee has the right to interpret the national security law. But when there is nothing in the law on this, the interpreta­tion is in practice [the] making of a new rule rather than an interpreta­tion of an existing law,” he said.

Pro-Beijing heavyweigh­t Maria Tam Wai-chiu, a lawyer by trade, said the legislativ­e intent had always been clear, adding it was to prevent any act that could endanger national security and oppose foreign individual­s and bodies in their attempt to interfere with the internal affairs of the city.

When asked which specific clauses would be interprete­d, the chief executive did not give an answer. “At the present moment, I’m only requesting for an interpreta­tion of the law to address my question. How eventually that interpreta­tion will be, will be a decision by the [standing committee]. I will leave it to the decision of the [standing committee],” Lee said yesterday.

The interpreta­tion is in practice [the] making of a new rule rather than an interpreta­tion of an existing law

JOHANNES CHAN, FORMER HKU SCHOLAR

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