By Danny Gittings
PDF version
1.
Hong Kong has a new Chief
Justice. The end of August sees the retirement of Andrew Li, who has led Hong
Kong’s Court of Final Appeal since its creation on the night of the former
British colony’s return to China on July 1, 1997. His replacement will be Geoffrey
Ma, who is being elevated from his position presiding over the court
immediately below, Hong Kong’s Court of Appeal.1
2.
Over the next three years, all
three other permanent judges on Hong Kong’s Court of Final Appeal will reach
retirement age. That does not necessarily mean all three will immediately step
down, since Hong Kong judges sometimes stay in office beyond their official
retirement age.2 It does, however, suggest that the coming
years will see a wholesale change in the composition of a court that is often
seen as playing a vital role in protecting Hong Kong’s separate system and
civil liberties.
3.
Almost nowhere else in the
world is it possible to find a territory that is not a country, yet has its own
final appellate court. But that was a key part of the deal struck between
London and Beijing in 1984,3 under which Britain agreed to restore
Hong Kong to China in 1997, in return for generous promises about the high
degree of autonomy Hong Kong would enjoy under a “one country, two systems”
formula. These were subsequently written into a constitutional document known
as the Hong Kong Basic Law. This serves as Hong Kong’s highest law and has been
repeatedly invoked by the Court of Final Appeal since 1997 to strike down
actions of the Hong Kong government, and even other laws, which infringe on
fundamental freedoms.
4.
That explains the sense of
concern in recent months—both locally and among some who watch events in Hong
Kong from overseas—that the coming change of the guard in Hong Kong’s highest
court may weaken its commitment to defend civil liberties, especially in cases
involving Beijing. Such concerns are heightened by the fact that almost the
only judges with sufficient experience to fill the shoes of not just the
outgoing Chief Justice, but also the other vacancies which will arise on the
Court of Final Appeal over the next few years, are likely to come from the
court immediately below.4
5.
That court, the Court of
Appeal, has a reputation for generally taking a more conservative stance than
Hong Kong’s highest court on human rights issues.
Geoffrey Ma Procrastinates
6.
Take, for example, two famous
cases involving the Falun Gong, the religious group banned in China but still
legal in Hong Kong, which continues to infuriate mainland officials by staging
public protests in the territory.
In HKSAR v Yeung May Wan [2004]5, a panel of Court of Appeal judges headed by Chief Judge Ma (as Geoffrey Ma is known in that court) hesitated for more than a year before delivering judgment in a politically sensitive case involving 16 Falun Gong members who had been arrested while protesting outside the Chinese Central Government’s Liaison Office in Hong Kong. That unprecedentedly long delay provoked expressions of international concern.6 When the Court of Appeal eventually did deliver a judgement, although it contained valuable passages on the importance of protecting fundamental freedoms, the Ma-led court upheld some of the convictions, despite conceding that the original arrests of the protests had been unlawful.
In HKSAR v Yeung May Wan [2004]5, a panel of Court of Appeal judges headed by Chief Judge Ma (as Geoffrey Ma is known in that court) hesitated for more than a year before delivering judgment in a politically sensitive case involving 16 Falun Gong members who had been arrested while protesting outside the Chinese Central Government’s Liaison Office in Hong Kong. That unprecedentedly long delay provoked expressions of international concern.6 When the Court of Appeal eventually did deliver a judgement, although it contained valuable passages on the importance of protecting fundamental freedoms, the Ma-led court upheld some of the convictions, despite conceding that the original arrests of the protests had been unlawful.
7.
The contrast that sometimes exists
between the two courts was demonstrated by how swiftly the Court of Final
Appeal subsequently handled this case, delivering judgment within a month of
its court hearing and quashing all remaining convictions against the Falun Gong
protesters.7 Chief Justice Li was sharply critical of
the lower court’s “unacceptable” procrastination in deciding the case. He even
expressed scepticism about Chief Judge Ma’s explanation that the long delay had
been caused by the need to wait for a decision in another case.8
8.
In Chu Woan Chyi v Director
of Immigration [2009]9, another court case involving Falun Gong
protesters, a panel of Court of Appeal judges again headed by Chief Judge Ma
accepted that the Hong Kong Government had failed to tell the truth about its
reasons for barring four Falun Gong practitioners from Hong Kong, but
nonetheless upheld the entry ban.
9.
That case has been cited by
some eminent lawyers in Hong Kong as an example of the new Chief Justice’s more
conservative approach to human rights issues than his predecessor.10 It is easy to see why such cases give
rise to cause for concern. After all, if similar cases arise again in future,
the new Chief Justice has already shown he might be inclined to take a
different approach from the current Court of Final Appeal.
10.
That might be less significant
were the new Chief Justice the only new face on the Court of Final Appeal. But
when taken together with some of the other likely changes to the composition of
the court over the next few years, it offers the possibility—although it should
be stressed only the possibility—of a broader shift in the inclination of Hong
Kong’s highest court.
11.
That is particularly true of
the likely retirement of Justice Kemal Bokhary, easily the most liberal of the
permanent judges on the Court of Final Appeal.11 Justice Bokhary is sometimes described
by legal scholars as the “conscience” of the Court of Final Appeal. It is a
description which presumably infuriates the other judges, who may justly
question why the court is seen as having only one conscience. Nonetheless few
would dispute that, while the Li-led Court of Final Appeal may have a generally
good track record as a whole in terms of defending fundamental freedoms, it is
Justice Bokhary who has been at the forefront of trying to push the boundaries
even further.
The Court's Conscience Dissents
12.
Most famously, in Ng Siu
Tung v Director of Immigration [2002],12 he dissented from the Chief Justice and
his other colleagues on the Court of Final Appeal, and tried to reverse the
practical impact of a controversial ruling by China’s legislature two years
earlier. That 1999 interpretation from the National People’s Congress Standing
Committee had banned large numbers of children born in China to a Hong Kong
parent from moving to the territory, despite an earlier court decision in their
favour. Justice Bokhary sought to mitigate the effects of this ban by arguing
that large numbers of the children involved still had a legally-enforceable
“legitimate expectation” that they would be allowed to live in Hong Kong, based
on promises made by Hong Kong officials. It was a view that the other judges on
the Court of Final Appeal were only prepared to apply to a much smaller
category of children.13
13.
In Leung Kwok Hung v HKSAR
[2005],14 a case involving an unauthorised street
protest by one of Hong Kong’s most famous pro-democracy politicians, who is
popularly known as “Long Hair,” Justice Bokhary held that the entire system
which allows the police to restrict street protests violated human rights
protected under the Hong Kong Basic Law.15 It was a view which, once again, found
little support from other judges on the court—who were only prepared to rule in
favour of Leung on one specific point.16
14.
In both cases, Justice
Bokhary’s dissents were better argued than, and are seen by many legal scholars
as intellectually superior to, the more cautious judgments of the Chief Justice
and the other judges on the court.17 But Justice Bokhary reaches retirement
age in 2012. For all their many talents, it is difficult to see any of the
judges likely to be elevated to permanent posts on the court stepping into his
shoes as the “conscience” of the court.18
15.
So it would be reasonable to
expect that the coming change in the composition of Hong Kong’s highest court
may be accompanied by some change in its approach to deciding cases on human
rights issues. It is important, though, not to exaggerate the extent of any
such shift. After all, judges decide cases predominantly on the legal issues
involved. In the common-law system, great reverence is paid to being consistent
with previous decisions of the court—which, in this case, means the generally
human-rights friendly body of jurisprudence built up by the Court of Final
Appeal since 1997.
16.
Remember also that, although
the Ma-led Court of Appeal hesitated unacceptably long before deciding the
politically-controversial case of Yeung May Wan, the decision—when it
eventually came—was partly (although not entirely) in the Falun Gong
protesters’ favour. Indeed, Chief Judge Ma criticised the magistrate who
originally convicted the protesters for making politically charged comments,
including a suggestion that the Falun Gong were acting in a manner
“disrespectful” of Chinese government officials stationed in Hong Kong.19
Principles Can Be Compromised
17.
But the most important reason
for believing that any change in the Court of Final Appeal’s approach is likely
to be incremental rather than abrupt is that if the “new” court occasionally
chooses to compromise on legal principles in politically controversial cases,
especially those involving Beijing, it will only be continuing a process that
began more than a decade ago.
18.
Retiring Chief Justice Andrew
Li has been rightly lionised for establishing Hong Kong’s Court of Final Appeal
as a respected force within the common-law world, with a generally (note the
qualification “generally”) impressive track record on human rights. Those
are major achievements for which he deserves full credit. Indeed, it is
difficult to find any public figure in Hong Kong as widely respected as the
outgoing Chief Justice.
19.
Yet any complete assessment of
the Li-led Court of Final Appeal should also consider the other side of the
picture. For all the impressive judgments in numerous human-rights cases, it
should not be forgotten that his court was also responsible for two dreadful
judgments in which the Chief Justice and his colleagues compromised to avoid
confrontations with Beijing at significant cost to Hong Kong’s autonomy and, to
a lesser extent, safeguards against restrictions on human rights.
20.
To understand the extent of
these compromises, which continue to have important implications today, it is
necessary to go back to the case which preceded them, Ng Ka Ling v Director
of Immigration [1999].20 Undoubtedly the most famous case ever
decided by the Court of Final Appeal, it provoked the only major confrontation
to date between the court and Beijing.
21.
The immediate cause for that
confrontation was a brief assertion in Ng Ka Ling that Hong Kong courts
have the jurisdiction to invalidate any actions in breach of the Hong Kong
Basic Law by Chinese authorities, specifically the National People’s Congress
and its Standing Committee. The case serves as a classic example of how judge’s
comments can prove far more significant than the decision itself (since the
point was not necessary to decide it), the court’s claim to such powers
provoked virulent attacks from Chinese scholars and officials.
The confrontation was only resolved when the court compromised by acceding to a Hong Kong Government request to reopen this part of its judgment and elaborate on it in more conciliatory language, in a supplementary judgment known as Ng Ka Ling (No. 2).21 That compromise attracted criticism at the time, since courts do not normally reopen judgements except in extraordinary circumstances such as fraud.
The confrontation was only resolved when the court compromised by acceding to a Hong Kong Government request to reopen this part of its judgment and elaborate on it in more conciliatory language, in a supplementary judgment known as Ng Ka Ling (No. 2).21 That compromise attracted criticism at the time, since courts do not normally reopen judgements except in extraordinary circumstances such as fraud.
22.
“To many observers the
clarification is a sign showing that the Court is unable to withstand political
pressure and is prepared to take a political course which has flimsy legal
ground and which is beyond the role of the Court,” commented Professor
Johannes Chan in a book published in 2000.22 Professor Chan, a prominent human-rights
lawyer, is now Dean of the Faculty of Law at the University of Hong Kong. Such
criticism was relatively muted since the elaboration had little legal
significance, simply rephrasing in more conciliatory language what the court
said in its original judgment.23 The same, however, cannot be said of the
court’s next compromise in the face of pressure from Beijing.
Beijing Gets to Re-interpret
the Law
23.
The Hong Kong Government
decided it was unable to cope with the practical consequences of the court’s
original judgment in Ng Ka Ling and the closely related case Chan Kam
Nga v Director of Immigration,24 which interpreted the Hong Kong Basic
Law in a way that would have potentially allowed more than one million children
born in China to move to Hong Kong. So, after the case was over, it asked the
National People’s Congress Standing Committee to issue a fresh interpretation
of the relevant provisions in the Hong Kong Basic Law that effectively negated
important parts of both judgments.
24.
That prompted lawyers for the
children to challenge the Standing Committee interpretation as in breach of the
Hong Kong Basic Law. At issue was Article 158(1), a loosely worded provision
which gives the Standing Committee power to interpret the Hong Kong Basic Law
without making clear precisely when this power can be exercised. In this case,
the issue could easily have been resolved on narrow grounds as one of the main
points of contention was a provision on China’s undisputed right to control the
entry of mainlanders into Hong Kong.25 Since this particular issue probably
should have been referred to the Standing Committee before judgment was
delivered in the Ng Ka Ling case,26 it would have been easy (and far less
controversial) for the Court of Final Appeal to have decided the case on the
narrow basis that the Standing Committee had the power to issue this particular
interpretation.
25.
Instead in Lau Kong Yung v
Director of Immigration [1999],27 the Court of Final Appeal chose to issue
an unnecessarily broad judgment that went much further in deferring to Beijing.
Rather than simply conclude that this particular interpretation was lawful, the
Li-led court held that there were no restrictions of any kind on the Standing
Committee’s interpretative powers, even if it chose to use these to interfere
in matters which should normally be left for Hong Kong to decide on its own.
That sweeping conclusion (which went far beyond what was necessary to decide the
case) has proved deeply damaging for Hong Kong’s autonomy, paving the way for a
second interpretation three years later in which the Standing Committee seized
control of decisions on changes to the election system for the Legislative
Council.28 This was in violation of the original
wording of the Hong Kong Basic Law which makes it clear that, after 2007, such
matters should be for Hong Kong alone to decide.29 It was the constraints imposed by this
2004 interpretation, which has been twice used to stipulate severe restrictions
on any changes to the electoral system, which did so much to aggravate the
debate on political reform in Hong Kong this year.30
26.
Thanks to some excellent
research by Professor Ling Bing of the Chinese University of Hong Kong, we now
know that the court’s concession of such unlimited powers to the Standing
Committee in Lau Kong Yung went not only beyond what was intended by the
drafters of the Hong Kong Basic Law but even the powers that the Standing
Committee has claimed for itself. It was, in short, an example of the
“pre-emptive cringe,” where a concession is made which has not been explicitly
demanded, and far from the Li-led court’s finest hour.31
27.
The same is true of a second
judgment by the court—only two weeks later—in another politically sensitive
case involving Beijing. In HKSAR v Ng Kung Siu [1999],32 the Court of Final Appeal departed so
radically from its usual approach of taking an expansive approach towards human
rights protection that those of us who teach the Hong Kong Basic Law repeatedly
have to remind our students to treat this case as an exception to the court’s
generally positive track record in human rights cases.
Should the Flag be Sacrosanct?
28.
It should be acknowledged that Ng
Kung Siu involved a difficult issue which courts in the U.S. and many other
countries have also struggled with: To what extent is it permissible to
restrict personal freedom in order to protect the national flag as a symbol of
the nation? Two pro-democracy protesters had desecrated the Chinese flag
as part of a protest against the Beijing government in violation of a Hong Kong
law, which is a local version of one of the few Chinese national laws applied
in Hong Kong.33 They successfully appealed against their
convictions to the Court of Appeal (this was before Geoffrey Ma’s appointment
to that court),34 provoking outrage from some Beijing
loyalists.
29.
However the Court of Final
Appeal averted another confrontation with Chinese central authorities by
reversing the Court of Appeal decision and reinstating the convictions. Once
again the Li-led court could have reached this decision on much narrower
grounds, since the lower courts had overlooked some important legal issues.
Equally, drawing on the sharply-divided jurisprudence of the U.S. courts (which
ultimately, but narrowly, chose to decide flag desecration cases the other way),35 the court could have chosen to treat
protection of the national flag as a special case, which falls just within the
permissible restrictions on human rights.
30.
Instead, in a politically
flavoured judgment which saw the Chief Justice quote from a speech by then
Chinese President Jiang Zemin, the court held that restrictions on even the
most fundamental freedoms could be justified whenever they are necessary in the
interests of society as a whole.36 This, as Audrey Eu, a lawyer for one of
the defendants and now one of Hong Kong’s most prominent pro-democracy
politicians, unsuccessfully sought to argue, drives a major hole through the
human-rights protections that form such an important part of “one country, two
systems”—since it could potentially be used to justify all kinds of
restrictions on civil liberties.37 It is, however, to the court’s credit
that this has not happened since then. Instead, as memories of the 1999
confrontation with Beijing faded away, the Li-led court reverted to a generally
more robust approach in protection of human rights.38
31.
Note that, in both these
politically charged cases, the decision of the court was unanimous. Even
Justice Bokhary, the most liberal member of the court, did not dissent,
although he was clearly troubled by the decision in Ng Kung Siu,
delivering a separate judgment in which sought to justify the decision on much
narrower grounds that would make it more difficult for the case to be used as a
precedent for other restrictions on human rights.39
32.
More than a decade later, it is
now generally accepted in Hong Kong that the court’s judgment (including
Justice Bokhary’s reluctant assent) was at least partly a political compromise,
aimed at avoiding another confrontation with Beijing. Take, for instance, these
comments by Professor Chan, in an article reflecting on the 10th anniversary of
the Hong Kong Basic Law in 2007:
“This cautious attitude may be understandable at a time when the relationship between the Court and the NPCSC was rather uneasy, if not tense and when mutual trust was at its lowest. The Court needed time to re-build the trust and to search for a new balance between aligning itself as a court of final adjudication and respecting the sovereignty of the Central Government in exercising the power of final interpretation of the Basic Law.”40
“This cautious attitude may be understandable at a time when the relationship between the Court and the NPCSC was rather uneasy, if not tense and when mutual trust was at its lowest. The Court needed time to re-build the trust and to search for a new balance between aligning itself as a court of final adjudication and respecting the sovereignty of the Central Government in exercising the power of final interpretation of the Basic Law.”40
33.
Others have been blunter. Po
Jen Yap, an assistant professor at the University of Hong Kong’s Faculty of
Law, has suggested the court cannot be “blind to the political consequences of
its decisions” and that it is only natural for the judges to be “willing to
permit lapses of legal logic and reasoning” in some particularly sensitive
cases.41
34.
Since those dark days in late
1999 when the Court of Final Appeal resorted to a “pre-emptive cringe,” the
Li-led court has clearly recovered its nerve. Occasionally, it has even defied
Beijing once again, although in a more carefully calibrated manner than in Ng
Ka Ling.42 As a result, it is not surprising to see
the outgoing Chief Justice receive such well-deserved accolades upon his
retirement.
35.
Nonetheless the compromises
made in those two cases should not be forgotten. Looking forward, there is an
important lesson from the court’s decisions in Lau Kong Yung and Ng
Kung Siu. If even all the members of a Li-led court (including Justice
Bokhary, perhaps the most liberal judge we are ever likely to see sitting on
the Court of Final Appeal) were willing to make such damaging concessions in
order to avoid another confrontation in China, it shows that no court in Hong
Kong can ever be entirely blind to the political realities that exist under
“one country, two systems.”
36.
The new Chief Justice may
slightly accelerate that process, although given the way the judicial system
functions any changes are likely to be gradual. But, even if he does, Chief
Justice Ma (as he will soon be known) will only be continuing a process that
began more than a decade ago—when the Hong Kong courts first began learning how
to live with China.
________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________
37.
Danny Gittings is a barrister
and program director at the College of Humanities and Law in the University of
Hong Kong’s School of Professional and Continuing Education. He is co-editor of
"Introduction to Crime, Law and Justice in Hong Kong" (Hong Kong
University Press, 2009).
38.
1 Ma’s title is Chief Judge of the High Court, which comprises not only the Court of Appeal (where he sits as a Justice of Appeal) but also the court immediately below, the Court of First Instance.
1 Ma’s title is Chief Judge of the High Court, which comprises not only the Court of Appeal (where he sits as a Justice of Appeal) but also the court immediately below, the Court of First Instance.
39.
2 Under s14(2)(a) Hong Kong
Court of Final Appeal Ordinance (Cap 484), the term of office of a permanent
judge of the Court of Final Appeal may be extended a maximum of two times
beyond his retirement age, on each occasion for a period of three years.
40.
3 This was the Sino-British
Joint Declaration on the Question of Hong Kong. The importance of China’s
concession of the power of final adjudication to Hong Kong is evident from the
fact that it is metioned in the 3rd of the 12 Basic Policies of the PRC
Regarding Hong Kong in Article 3 of the main text of the Joint Declaration.
41.
4 Under s12 of the Hong Kong
Court of Appeal Ordinance, it is also possible for judges to be appointed
directly to the Court of Final Appeal from the Court of First Instance or from
among the ranks of those barristers in practice in Hong Kong with at least 10
years experience This is very unusual, although a rare exception was the
appointment of Andrew Li directly from practice as a barrister to the post of
Chief Justice in 1997.
43.
6 See, for example, the British
Government’s Six-monthly Report on Hong Kong (January-June 2004) at para
71. Also Cliff Buddle, Is justice delayed justice denied to Falun Gong 16 (South
China Morning Post, July 25, 2004).
45.
8 This was HKSAR v Leung Kwok
Hung [2004] 3 HKLRD 729. Although this case also involved the right to
protest, the legal issues involved were very different. As a result, Chief
Justice Li concluded that “the reason given is not objectively a sufficient
justification for the delay.”
47.
10 See, for example, the comments of Ronny Tong, SC cited in Patsy Moy, New
chief justice gives oath on lawyer wife (Hong Kong Standard, April 9, 2010)
48.
11 It should, however, be noted that there is also one non-permanent judge
sitting on the Court of Final Appeal in any case. This fifth member of the
court is usually drawn from a panel of distinguished retired judges from other
common-law jurisdictions (in practice, only the United Kingdom, Australia and
New Zealand), and can bring another liberal voice to the court in some cases.
50.
13 For an excellent account of this case, see Christopher Forsyth and
Rebecca Williams, Closing Chapter in the Immigrant Children Saga:
Substantive Legitimate Expectations and Administrative Justice in Hong Kong
(2002) 10(1) APLR 29
52.
15 Under the Public Order Ordinance (Cap 245), Hong Kong Police must be
notified in advance of any public protest involving at least 30 people, and
have certain powers to ban or restrict such protests.
53.
16 This was striking from the ordinance two ill-defined words, which the court
held gave the police excessive discretion to restrict public protests. However,
as Professor Yap notes, “The practical benefits of this decision to potential
demonstrators are minimal, especially since the Commissioner retains a host of
at-large broad powers to prohibit or restrain the organisation of public
processions in Hong Kong” (see Po Jen Yap, Constitutional Review under the
Basic Law: The Rise, Retreat and Resurgence of Judicial Power in Hong Kong,
(2007) 37 HKLJ 449, 466).
54.
17 See, for example, Albert HY Chen, Constitutional Adjudication in
post-1997 Hong Kong (2006) 15 PACRLPJ 627, 671 and Janice Brabyn, Leung
Kwok Hung and Others Through the Hong Kong Courts (2006) 36 HKLJ 83.
55.
18 One liberal judge on the Court of Appeal, Justice Hartmann, who has
recently been appointed to a panel of non-permanent judges for the Court of Final
Appeal, has been mentioned by some commentators as a possible counterweight to
the more conservative inclinations of the new Chief Justice. However it is
difficult to give much credence to this argument since, as a non-permanent Hong
Kong judge on the Court of Final Appeal, Justice Hartmann is only likely to be
called to hear the occasional case (in practice, when one of the permanent Hong
Kong judges is not available).
59.
22 “What the Court of Final Appeal Has Not Clarified in Its Clarification:
Jurisdiction and Amicus Intervention,” in Chan, Fu & Ghai (eds.) Hong
Kong’s Constitutional Debate: Conflict over Interpretation, (Hong Kong
University Press, 2000) at page 180.
60.
23 The court simply acknowledged it would be bound by any action of the
National People’s Congress and its Standing Committee “which is in accordance
with the provisions of the Basic Law,” but carefully avoided saying anything
further about what it would do about actions that breach the Hong Kong Basic
Law.
62.
25 Article 22(4) of the Hong Kong Basic Law requires that “people from other
parts of China must apply for approval” to enter Hong Kong, and that those
wishing to settle in Hong Kong must obtain approval from Chinese authorities.
63.
26 Under Article 158(3) of the Hong Kong Basic Law, the Court of Final
Appeal is required to refer to the National People’s Congress Standing
Committee issues involving the interpretation of any Hong Kong Basic Law
provisions “concerning affairs which are the responsibility of the Central People’s
Government, or concerning the relationship between the Central Authorities and
the Region.” Although Article 22(4) clearly falls into this category, in Ng
Ka Ling the court managed to avoid referring it to the Standing Committee
by controversially concluding that it was not the “predominant provision” at
issue in this case.
65.
28 In Interpretations of Clause 7 of Annex I and Clause 3 of Annex II Of
the Basic Law of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (6 April
2004), the Standing Committee added a requirement that it must approve whether
“there is a need” to make changes to the electoral systems for both the Chief
Executive and the Legislative Council before the process of making such changes
can even begin in Hong Kong.
66.
29 The original wording of Clause 3 of Annex II only requires the approval
of any changes by two-thirds of the Legislative Council, consent of the Chief
Executive and reporting to the Standing Committee for the record (italics
added). There is no requirement for Standing Committee approval.
67.
30 Using the new power it had asserted under the 2004 Interpretation, the
Standing Committee issued Decisions in 2004 and 2007 requiring that any changes
to the electoral system must ensure that half the seats in the Legislative
Council continue to be filled through functional constituency elections. This
infuriated the pro-democracy camp, which wants to see early progress towards
the abolition of functional constituencies and led to the defeat of the Hong
Kong Government’s proposals for changing the electoral system for the 2008
polls. A similar defeat of proposals for changing the electoral system for the
2012 polls was only averted by a last minute compromise, which greatly expanded
the electoral base of five functional constituencies.
68.
31 Professor Ling explains that, in its three interpretations of the Hong
Kong Basic Law since 1997, the Standing Committee has never suggested that it
is interpreting provisions which it believes fall within Hong Kong’s autonomy
(although, in some cases, the Standing Committee’s view of which provisions
fall within Hong Kong’s autonomy differs considerably from the
generally-accepted view on this point in Hong Kong). See Subject Matter
Limitation on the NPCSC’s Power to Interpret the Basic Law, (2007) 37 HKLJ
619.
70.
33 S7 of the National Flag and National Emblem Ordinance (No. 116 of 1997),
which implements in Hong Kong the Law of the PRC on the National Flag and the
Law of the PRC on the National Emblem, and makes it a criminal offence to
desecrate the Chinese national flag, punishable by a fine or prison sentence of
up to fine.
72.
35 See Texas v Johnson 491 U.S. 397 (1989) and United States v
Eichman 496 US. 310 (1990), both U.S. Supreme Court cases on flag
desecration decided by 5-4 majorities.
73.
36 Ng Kung Siu (see note 32) at 922-925. The court did this by taking
an extremely broad view of the meaning of ordre public, an ill-defined
concept which is a permissible restriction on freedom of expression in
international human-rights covenants incorporated into the Hong Kong Basic Law.
The court explained this justified restrictions on civil liberties, where these
are, “necessary for the protection of the general welfare or for the interests
of the collectivity as a whole.”
74.
37 Ibid at 933, where Justice Bokhary summarises Eu’s argument and
expresses some sympathy with it.
75.
38 For example the freedom of assembly cases of Yeung May Wan (see
note 5) and Leung Kwok Hung (see note 14) mentioned earlier in this
article.
76.
39 Ng Kung Siu (see note 32) at 927-933. While ultimately siding with
the other judges on the court, Justice Bokhary stressed his belief that banning
desecration of the Chinese flag fell at the very edge of permissible
restrictions on freedom of expression—so that any attempt to extend this ban
into other areas would be unconstitutional.
77.
40 Johannes Chan, Basic Law and Constitutional Review: The First Decade,
(2007) 37 HKLJ 407. Professor Chan notes that Justice Bokhary “could have
easily delivered a dissenting judgment, especially in light of the marginal
majority of 5 to 4 in the relevant US jurisprudence,” but nonetheless chose not
to do so.
79.
42 See, for example, Director of Immigration v Chong Fung Yuen [2001]
2 HKLRD 533. In this case, the Court of Final Appeal reiterated its belief that
the Standing Committee has an unrestricted power to interpret the Hong Kong
Basic Law. However it then refused to apply the interpretation issued by the
Standing Committee in 1999, on the grounds that this case involved a different
sub-section of the provision in the Hong Kong Basic Law that had been at issue
in the 1999 interpretation.
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