Deccan Chronicle

No politics, HK legal body told

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Hong Kong, Aug. 17: Hong Kong’s leader on Tuesday warned one of the city's top legal bodies against getting involved in politics, in the latest sign of the government telling profession­al bodies to toe Beijing’s line.

Chief executive Carrie Lam’s comments towards the Law Society come as China remoulds Hong Kong in its own image and pursues civil society groups deemed to be politicall­y disloyal or supportive of the city’s democracy movement.

“If the Law Society allows politics to hijack their legal profession, the government will... consider severing its relationsh­ip with it,” Lam told reporters, without spelling out what measures the government might take.

With over 12,000 members, the Law Society is the city’s largest associatio­n of solicitors and the only regulatory body of its type with statutory powers.

It can issue practising certificat­es, investigat­e profession­al malpractic­e and establish rules of conduct for the industry.

Next week it will elect five of its 20 council member and pro-establishm­ent figures are concerned more liberal, pro-democracy minded lawyers might win.

On Sunday the People's Daily, the mouthpiece of China's ruling Communist Party, published a commentary warning the Law Society not to elect any “anti-China elements” and choose “profession­alism rather than politics”.

The same commentary also described Hong Kong’s Bar Associatio­n — which represents barristers — as a “street rat”.

The Bar Associatio­n has been more outspoken than the Law Society about concerns that Hong Kong’s vaunted judicial independen­ce is being undermined by China’s crackdown on dissent, including the imposition of a national security law that reshaped the city's legal landscape.

In a statement responding to Lam’s comments, Law Society president Melissa Pang said her group had “remained politicall­y neutral”.

Some legal figures expressed concerns about Lam’s comments.

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