Hong Kong's Lam tells solicitors' group to stay out of politics
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[August 17, 2021]
By Sara Cheng
HONG KONG (Reuters) -Hong Kong's government
may cut ties with one of the city's key legal profession associations if
it gets involved in politics, leader Carrie Lam said on Tuesday in her
latest warning to civil society groups.
Lam's comments come before an Aug. 24 election for five seats on the
council of Hong Kong's Law Society, the professional association and
regulator for the city's 12,000 solicitors.
Lam said in April the government could intervene if necessary in the Bar
Association for barristers, whose chairman Paul Harris has been labelled
an "anti-China" politician by top Beijing officials after he criticised
jail terms handed to some pro-democracy politicians.
Although the Law Society is seen as more conservative than the Bar
Association, debates in its recent elections have focused on a more
liberal agenda. This year, four of the candidates are considered
outspoken, raising fears among some government officials of a political
agenda.
"If the Law Society’s professionalism is trumped by politics, the
government will consider cutting ties with it," Lam told reporters at
her regular weekly news conference.
The Law Society said it remained politically neutral.
"We are in constant communication with relevant governmental
departments, expressing opinion to improve the practice environment and
regularly responds, from the legal perspective, to consultations on
different issues," Law Society President Melissa Pang said.
The Bar Association did not immediately respond to a request for
comment. It has said it is not a political organisation.
On Saturday, China's People Daily, the official newspaper of the ruling
Communist Party, called on the Law Society not to become a “politicised
group” and show it was different than the Bar Association, which it
described as a "running rat."
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Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam attends a news conference
following the annual policy address in Hong Kong, China November 25,
2020. REUTERS/Lam Yik
"While there may be some different political views on
the Council, even if the four of us all win, the balance will be
held by those who are really politically neutral and will not allow
the Council to be outspoken in a way that would cause concern to the
government," candidate Jonathan Ross said.
Key institutions of Hong Kong's civil society have disbanded in the
past week, citing political pressure, further cementing the former
British colony's authoritarian turn since Beijing imposed a sweeping
national security law in June 2020.
Civil Human Rights Front, the pro-democracy group that organises
Hong Kong's annual July 1 rally and galvanized millions to take part
in street protests in 2019, said on Saturday it had disbanded.
The Professional Teachers' Union, which had around 95,000 members,
said last Tuesday it would disband after criticism by Chinese state
media and Hong Kong authorities.
The democracy movement in the city has crumbled in the past year,
with the most prominent activists and politicians in prison or in
self-exile and popular anti-government tabloid Apple Daily forced to
close amid a national security probe.
Lam also said on Tuesday she did not have an explicit timetable for
the implementation in Hong Kong of a mainland Chinese law that
retaliates against foreign sanctions.
(Writing by Marius Zaharia; Editing by Anne Marie Roantree and Gerry
Doyle)
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