China Daily

4 HK lawmakers disqualifi­ed over oaths

- By SHADOW LI and LUIS LIU in Hong Kong

Hong Kong’s High Court has thrown out four lawmakers of the Legislativ­e Council for violating the legal requiremen­ts of oath-taking when being sworn in.

They are the second group of legislator­s to be disqualifi­ed for not taking the oath properly, after two separatist lawmakers were ousted in November.

In a written judgment handed down on Friday, Court of First Instance Judge Thomas Au Hing-cheung said the oaths by the four lawmakers — Leung Kwok-hung, Edward Yiu Chung-yim, Lau Siu-lai and Nathan Law Kwun-chung — didn’t follow the strict wording and solemnity as required by law. Therefore, the court ordered the four to be disqualifi­ed with immediate effect. Their Legislativ­e Council membership was deemed invalid from Oct 12, 2016.

The four lawmakers were found to have deviated from the statutory wording of the oath, which amounted to an unlawful swearing-in, accordly, ing to the National People’s Congress Standing Committee’s interpreta­tion of the Basic Law, the city’s constituti­onal document.

The court was told that during the solemn swearing-in, Leung was chanting political slogans and Yiu added words to his oath.

Lau read her oath with a sixsecond interval between each Chinese character deliberate- as she admitted, to profane the oath.

Law changed his tone when pledging allegiance to China to make it sound like a question.

The judicial review to challenge the eligibilit­y of the four was moved by Leung Chunying, the former chief executive of the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region, and Secretary for Justice Rimsky Yuen Kwok-keung in December.

In November, two lawmakers

were disqualifi­ed after they advocated independen­ce and insulted the nation during their swearing-in in October.

Outside the courtroom on Friday, a group of Hong Kong people applauded the court’s decision.

Chief Executive Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor said she respects the judgment. She said the basis of a healthy executive-legislativ­e relation is the rule of law.

Legislativ­e Council President Andrew Leung Kwan-yuen said the council’s Secretaria­t will send a letter to each of the disqualifi­ed lawmakers to inform them to move out of their offices in two weeks. The Legislativ­e Council Commission will discuss later how much salary and remunerati­on the lawmakers should pay back.

He said previous Legislativ­e Council voting results will not be affected.

The disqualifi­cation of the four lawmakers will also tem- porarily give the pro-establishm­ent camp an upper hand in Hong Kong’s legislatur­e. That means that before a by-election, the opposition won’t have enough seats to veto motions or bills proposed by the government, even if they vote en bloc. It may help the pro-establishm­ent camp to put an end to the long-standing stalling tactic, known as filibuster­ing, that is frequently used by the “pan-democratic” camp.

The Legislativ­e Council will have its summer recess from the end of July to early October. A by-election is expected in several months.

The city’s legal profession­als supported the court’s decision. Barrister and legislator Priscilla Leung Mei-fun said the judgment “gave back the dignity” to the Legislativ­e Council and clarified the requiremen­t laid down in the “one country, two systems” principle and the Basic Law.

 ?? ROY LIU / CHINA DAILY ?? Residents outside the high court hold placards and shout slogans on Friday to support the disqualifi­cation of four lawmakers who did not follow the requiremen­ts when they took their oaths to serve on the Legislativ­e Council in October last year.
ROY LIU / CHINA DAILY Residents outside the high court hold placards and shout slogans on Friday to support the disqualifi­cation of four lawmakers who did not follow the requiremen­ts when they took their oaths to serve on the Legislativ­e Council in October last year.

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