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Hong Kong not an ‘independent judicial kingdom’: pro-Beijing heavyweight doubles down on reform calls

  • Tam Yiu-chung, city’s sole delegate to country’s top legislative body, makes comments in publication as justice minister insists system ‘very much’ transparent
  • Debate comes against backdrop of highly polarised landscape, with both sides of political divide slamming court rulings deemed to favour rivals

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The opening ceremony of the new legal cycle in Hong Kong last year. Photo: Robert Ng
Pro-Beijing heavyweight Tam Yiu-chung has doubled down on calls to reform Hong Kong’s judiciary, expressing regret that “judicial independence” has been misinterpreted as “an independent judicial kingdom”.
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Tam, the city’s sole deputy to the country’s top legislative body, the National People’s Congress Standing Committee, also asked judges not to regard themselves as “elites”, adding they should make “down-to-earth” rulings that suited the prevailing situation in society.

His comments, made in an article published in the latest issue of Bauhinia Magazine, came as the city’s justice minister Teresa Cheng Yeuk-wah declined to throw government support behind such calls, saying it was up to the judiciary.

Pro-Beijing heavyweight Tam Yiu-chung is Hong Kong’s sole delegate to the country’s top legislative body. Photo: Handout
Pro-Beijing heavyweight Tam Yiu-chung is Hong Kong’s sole delegate to the country’s top legislative body. Photo: Handout

Zhang Xiaoming, deputy director of the State Council’s Hong Kong and Macau Affairs Office, raised the need for judicial reform in the city last November, when he cited the views of former Court of Final Appeal judge Henry Litton, who said local courts had “put a slant on the Basic Law, by applying obscure norms and values from overseas which are totally unsuited to Hong Kong’s circumstances”.

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