Heartwarming to see to many tributes to the splendour of Hong Kong’s legal system, following the news that two UK judges are withdrawing from their role as occasional participants in the proceedings of our Court of Final Appeal.
Other overseas judges are apparently still up for this gig. More attention is needed in some places to the difference between political impartiality and political ignorance, I think. Or these overseas people could try looking at the detailed working of the system which they adorn and endorse.
An example: this week Mr Leung Kwok-hung, once my local Legislative Councillor, appeared in a magistrates court and was convicted of an offence committed six years ago. This Dickensian legal process culminated in a punishment of 14 days in prison. A mountain has laboured to bring forth a mouse.
This will be of little concern to Mr Leung, who is already serving a jail term for being in Victoria Park at the wrong time, and if he was not already in prison would be waiting in custody for his trial for participating in a primary for an election which was cancelled.
Some 40-odd primary participants are still consuming the correctional M & Ms, even though the primary took place in 2020 and the arrests in January last year.
Mr Leung’s six-year wait for a decision is probably some sort of record. Do not be deceived by excuses like the 2019 unrest or the subsequent COVID outbreak. Mr Leung was originally prosecuted in magistrates court soon after the offence (disorder in Legco) and he was acquitted.
There matters rested until 2020, when there seems to have been a change in prosecutorial policy to something along the lines of identifying government critics and throwing anything at them that will stick. The Department of Justice (sic) appealed the acquittal. The matter then percolated up the system to the Court of Final Appeal, which sent it back to the magistrate with some legal notes.
It must seem to anyone with a sense of proportion that this was a shocking waste of time and money for everyone concerned. Mr Leung is hardly a threat to order in the legislature now that we have an improved electoral system in which members are effectively chosen by the government. I suppose with the usual discount he will serve ten days.
I note with interest that one of our now resigned overseas judges was on the panel which considered Mr Leung’s case and seems to have been somewhat resistant to arguments based on the right to freedom of speech.
Another example: delving into the lower reaches of the legal system we can consider the case of Mr Samuel Bickett. Mr Bickett was walking through an MTR pedestrian tunnel when he came across two people beating up a kid. It appears from the video, quite a lot of which has appeared on the internet, that Mr Bickett and other people commented orally on this spectacle, in the midst of which the kid wriggled free and escaped, followed by his attacker.
The attacker, who turned out to be an off-duty cop, then returned and the sequel can be viewed here: https://twitter.com/HKer9000/status/1203288950627979264
Does that look to you like a plainclothes cop being interrupted in the course of an arrest by a man trying to steal his baton? That is what the magistrate made of it.
Mr Bickett appealed in vain to a High Court judge who seems to have supposed that the purpose of the proceedings was to exonerate the policeman. Having served his sentence he was then promptly deported. We have ways of making you wish you had pleaded guilty.
Finally we can consider the plight of two people who were arrested last week on sedition charges. The law on media reports on pending court cases is quite clear and in Hong Kong has been unenforced for so long that it is now followed only by media who think the authorities might seize any chance to give them a hard time.
You must not print, broadcast or whatever, anything which implies that the arrested person is guilty or innocent of the charges levelled. This means that you must also not state or imply that the luckless accused is also guilty of other offences. This is the sin for which, when I was very young, the editor of the Daily Mail was actually jailed.
The day after our sedition suspects were arrested we were treated to what I suppose might be considered in contempt of court circles the full Monty: the full names, ages and occupations of the two arrestees, followed by accusations, attributed to an official police briefing, that the pair were (besides printing seditious material, the offence charged) recruiting a Black Army to violently rebel against Chinese rule in Hong Kong.
Clearly the inaptly named Department of Justice does not see its role as including any protection for the prospect of a fair trial for arrested people. We are transitioning to a mainland-style system in which everyone who is arrested is guilty. The role of the court is to read the confession and pass sentence.
I don’t know what overseas judges make of all this. Perhaps they don’t read the Hong Kong newspapers. But if I was one of them I would not wish to touch the Hong Kong legal system with a barge pole.
Are you still in Hong Kong? What’s your Plan B? Do you expect to be “politely” encouraged to leave like Paul Harris, or are you happy to do time? It seems to me that you are sailing very close to the wind.
And I have nothing but admiration for your stance in any case.
Yes, still in HK. Having encouraged several generations of students in the idea that they have the right and obligation to express their opinions on public matters (with, I fear, serious consequences for some of them) I cannot just clam up myself. I expect to be left alone – too small a potato to interest the KGB – but who knows?
No potato is too small…