The Borneo Post

HK legal chief steps down amid judicial turbulence

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HONG KONG: Hong Kong’s legal chief, whose watch was marked by instances of perceived interferen­ce by China in the city’s rule of law, stepped down yesterday, more than four years before the end of his term.

An independen­t legal system sits at the core of the wide-ranging autonomy promised after Britain handed its former colony back to China in 1997 under a ‘ one country, two systems’ formula that guarantees it freedoms not enjoyed on the mainland.

Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam said Justice Secretary Rimsky Yuen had resigned for personal reasons, after starting his second five-year term in July.

“He has been a pillar of strength in upholding the rule of law in Hong Kong,” Lam said.

But Yuen’s t ime in of f ice was punctuated by several controvers­ies, including two rare protests by hundreds of lawyers.

Yuen, 53, was one of the key officials tasked with promoting a contentiou­s political reform package in 2014, which later helped trigger the months-long ‘ Umbrel la Movement’ street protests demanding, in vain, full democracy for the city.

He was targeted by demonstrat­ors after reports last year that he had overruled several senior public prosecutor­s to seek jail terms for three democrats involved in those protests, including Joshua Wong, the bespectacl­ed young activist who became the public face of the demonstrat­ions.

He was also criticised for pushing through an immigratio­n arrangemen­t that would allow Chinese officials to implement mainland laws inside a downtown high-speed railway station.

Yuen and Communist Party officials in Beijing argued that parts of the station would be legally regarded as ‘ mainland Chinese territory’, so the city’s mini- constituti­on, the Basic Law, which explicitly says national laws don’t apply in Hong Kong, would not be applicable.

The Hong Kong Bar Associatio­n called Beijing’s move “the most retrograde step to date in the implementa­tion of the Basic Law”.

On each occasion, “the ultimate decision was made in accordance with the law”, Yuen said yesterday, even though some people might not like the results.

Yuen also reportedly tried to dissuade Beijing from interferin­g in a court case against proindepen­dence lawmakers last year, and spoke openly about how “matters that can be properly handled within Hong Kong’s legal or judicial system should be left to be dealt with at the Hong Kong level as much as possible”.

The Chinese pa rl iament ultimately issued an interpreta­tion of the law, pre- empting the judge’s decision, effectivel­y barring the lawmakers from their posts. That prompted 2,000 lawyers to march in protest against what they said was the most blatant interferen­ce in the city’s judicial independen­ce.

Incoming Justice Secretary Teresa Cheng, 59, said her ‘prime mission’ would be to uphold the rule of law and that she would pursue criminal prosecutio­ns ‘ without any interferen­ce’. — Reuters

 ??  ?? This file photo shows a nurse displaying vials of Sanofi’s dengue vaccine Dengvaxia, which has been recalled from local health centres, in the district of Manila, following the suspension of the country’s public dengue immunisati­on programme. — AFP photo
This file photo shows a nurse displaying vials of Sanofi’s dengue vaccine Dengvaxia, which has been recalled from local health centres, in the district of Manila, following the suspension of the country’s public dengue immunisati­on programme. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? Teresa Cheng
Teresa Cheng

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