Rule of law in Hong Kong โ€˜more robust than outcome of any single caseโ€™: chief justice



Hong Kongโ€™s rule of law is โ€œmore robust and enduring than the outcome of any single caseโ€, the cityโ€™s chief justice has declared after former media boss Jimmy Lai Chee-ying was found guilty in a landmark national security case that drew international scrutiny and criticism.

In his speech at a ceremony to mark the opening of the legal year on Monday, Chief Justice Andrew Cheung Kui-nung warned that any calls for the early release of a defendant based on his occupation or political causes were a strike on the cityโ€™s rule of law, and that any threat of sanctions against judges had โ€œabsolutely no place in a civilised societyโ€.

At a press briefing after the ceremony, Cheung also weighed in on the appointment of overseas judges to the cityโ€™s top court, noting that many were willing to serve but for geopolitical tensions between mainland China and Western common law countries.

During the ceremony, Cheung first offered his views on Laiโ€™s high-profile trial, which had attracted significant international attention and commentary.

โ€œMany of us may be forgiven for growing weary of simplistic assertions that the rule of law is dead whenever a court reaches a result one finds unpalatable,โ€ the cityโ€™s top judge said.

โ€œThe rule of law in Hong Kong is far more robust and enduring than the outcome of any single case. It cannot be that the rule of law is alive one day, dead the next, and resurrected on the third, depending on whether the government or another party happens to prevail in court on a particular day.โ€

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