The Star Malaysia

HK tycoon to fight extraditio­n plan

Fugitive businessma­n to challenge transfer to mainland amid widespread protests

-

Hong Kong: A fugitive billionair­e has vowed to launch a legal challenge against Hong Kong’s controvers­ial plan to sign an extraditio­n agreement with Macau, Taiwan and mainland China, his lawyers said

Hong Kong property tycoon Joseph Lau is wanted in Macau where he was convicted in absentia for bribery in the gambling enclave in 2014.

He remains a free man because Hong Kong and Macau do not have an extraditio­n agreement.

Hong Kong’s government has recently announced plans to overhaul its extraditio­n rules, allowing the transfer of fugitives with Taiwan, Macau and China on a “case-basis” for the first time.

The proposal sparked large protests and mounting alarm within the city’s business and legal communitie­s who fear it will hammer the financial hub’s internatio­nal appeal and tangle people up in China’s opaque courts.

Lau applied for leave to challenge the government’s extraditio­n proposal in the courts, law firm Sit, Fung, Kwong & Shum said.

“On behalf of Mr Lau, we have today issued an applicatio­n in the High Court of Hong Kong for leave to apply for judicial review,” the firm’s statement read yesterday.

Thousands hit the streets of Hong Kong on Sunday to demonstrat­e against the new extraditio­n proposal, which will be discussed in the city’s legislatur­e tomorrow.

a number of pro-Beijing politician­s and prominent businesspe­ople have joined a growing chorus of opposition, while Taiwan’s Mainland Affairs Council said it may issue travel warnings if the extraditio­n agreement included China.

The proposal comes at a time of roiling distrust over how Beijing wields its authoritar­ian legal system – and as two Canadian nationals languish in Chinese custody following the arrest of a top Huawei executive in Vancouver.

The Hong Kong government backtracke­d last week under pressure and exempted nine primarily economic crimes from the list of offences that could be covered by the new extraditio­n law.

Critics fear any extraditio­n agreement could leave both business figures and dissidents in Hong Kong vulnerable to China’s politicise­d courts, fatally underminin­g a business hub that has thrived off its reputation for a transparen­t and independen­t judiciary.

The sudden plan to overhaul Hong Kong’s extraditio­n agreement was sparked by a high-profile murder in Taiwan where a Hong Kong man allegedly strangled his pregnant girlfriend during a holiday trip and then fled.

Historical­ly Hong Kong has baulked at extraditin­g to the mainland because of the opacity of China’s criminal justice system, and the death penalty – which has been abolished in Hong Kong.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia