The Timaru Herald

HK judiciary ‘will stay independen­t’

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China sought to reassure Hong Kong that its judiciary would remain independen­t under a new national security law as concerns grow that the city may lose one of its key selling points for internatio­nal companies.

‘‘The legislatio­n will not change the one country, two systems policy, Hong Kong’s capitalist system, high degree of autonomy, nor will it change the legal system in Hong Kong SAR, or affect the independen­t judicial power, including the right of final adjudicati­on exercised by the judiciary in Hong Kong,’’ Xie Feng, commission­er of China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Hong Kong, said at a briefing yesterday.

Still, Xie provided few new details on how the new law would be implemente­d while addressing journalist­s and diplomats.

Instead he repeated a line that said that protesters breached a red line supporting independen­ce, mischaract­erising a movement that pushed for meaningful elections, an independen­t review of police abuses and the withdrawal of a bill that would allow extraditio­ns to the mainland for the first time.

Carrie Lam, the city’s leader, is expected to hold her regular weekly briefing today.

China last week stirred outrage in Hong Kong by announcing that it would write in a sweeping new national security law into the city’s charter, fuelling fresh protests and a sell-off in the markets. The National People’s Congress, China’s rubber-stamp parliament meeting in Beijing this week, confirmed that it would pass a bill establishi­ng ‘‘an enforcemen­t mechanism for ensuring national security’’ for the city, without providing details.

China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Hong Kong

The bill would require Hong Kong to quickly finish enacting national security regulation­s under the Basic Law that governs relations with China, NPC Standing Committee Vice Chairman Wang Chen said in a speech last week. China’s parliament empowers itself to set up a legal framework and implementa­tion mechanism to prevent and punish subversion, terrorism, separatism and foreign interferen­ce ‘‘or any acts that severely endanger national security,’’ Wang said.

The lack of details surroundin­g the new law has generated alarm among Hong Kong’s business community.

The American Chamber of Commerce in Hong Kong on Friday cited an independen­t judiciary as a key reason the city has prospered over the years.

Yesterday, Hong Kong’s Bar Associatio­n said the legislatio­n was incompatib­le with the Basic

Law that governs the city’s relations with China, calling it ‘‘worrying and problemati­c.’’ The associatio­n said a reference to ‘‘judicial organs’’ in a draft of the law gave rise to perception­s that Hong Kong’s judiciary would be instructed to act in a certain way, and urged authoritie­s in the city to urgently address constituti­onal and legal concerns.

‘‘Independen­ce of the judiciary is the cornerston­e of the success of the HKSAR and should not be undermined in any way,’’ the associatio­n said, referring to the formal name of the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region.

The measure is expected to pass through the NPC before the end of its annual session May 28. It would still require several procedural steps including approval by the NPC’s decision-making Standing Committee, which could come as early as next month, the South China Morning Post reported. – Washington Post

‘‘The legislatio­n will not change the one country, two systems policy, Hong Kong’s capitalist system, high degree of autonomy, nor will it change the legal system in Hong Kong SAR, or affect the independen­t judicial power . . .’’ Xie Feng

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