![]() |
| Thousands of legal professionals marched on the Central Government Offices in Hong Kong to protest against a proposed extradition law (AFP Photo/ISAAC LAWRENCE) |
Thousands of black-clad Hong Kong lawyers took to the streets Thursday in a silent march against a controversial extradition law proposal, as the city's last colonial governor slammed the plan as "a terrible blow".
The city's
pro-Beijing government is pushing a bill through the legislature that would
allow extraditions to any jurisdiction with which it doesn't already have a
treaty -- including mainland China for the first time.
The
proposal has sparked some of the biggest protests the city has seen in recent
years as well as criticism from influential legal groups, business associations
and western diplomats.
This week
has seen escalating criticism from the city's influential legal communities,
including the Law Society -- which published a detailed critique of the
proposals -- adding to opposition already voiced by the Bar Association and
multiple chambers of commerce.
Critics
fear the law, if passed, will entangle people in China's opaque and politicised
court system.
The
lawyers, mostly dressed in black, walked in silence from the Court of Final
Appeal to the government headquarters, where they gathered to observe three
minutes of silence.
Organisers
said around 2,500 to 3,000 people attended the march.
"As
you can all see that they come out for one reason and one reason only, because
they see there is a threat to the rule of law in Hong Kong," said lawmaker
Dennis Kwok, who organised the march.
"This
extradition bill, if passed, would do irreparable damage to our legal system,
to the rule of law, to the values that we treasure."
Legal
professionals have gathered to protest only five times since the former British
colony was handed to China.
Pro-democracy
heavyweight and lawyer Martin Lee said: "Once the bill becomes law, we can
not guarantee the safety of any person living or working in Hong Kong, or even
passing by Hong Kong."
Another
former lawmaker, Audrey Eu, added: "This amendment is being rushed through
with indecent and inexplicable haste. There is absolutely no justification for
pushing it through like this."
Earlier,
Hong Kong's last British governor, Chris Patten, described the plans to allow
extraditions to China as "a terrible blow" to the financial hub's
reputation.
"It's
a proposal, or a set of proposals, which strike a terrible blow... against the
rule of law, against Hong Kong's stability and security, against Hong Kong's
position as a great international trading hub," he said in a video
statement.
The
government has argued the proposal is needed to plug existing loopholes and
that the law needs to be passed quickly in order to extradite a Hong Kong man
who is wanted in Taiwan for murdering his girlfriend.
But critics
fear the Taiwanese case is being used to ram the law through the city's
parliament at the behest of Beijing.
Patten
described the move as an attempt "to remove the firewall between Hong
Kong's rule of law" and China "where there aren't any independent
courts, where the courts and the security services and the party's rules... are
rolled all together".
#UPDATE A huge peaceful protest in Hong Kong against controversial plans to allow extraditions to the Chinese mainland descended into violence early Monday as police clashed with small pockets of demonstrators outside the city's parliament https://t.co/Jd1HHaHwYF pic.twitter.com/0I1taJTOgO— AFP news agency (@AFP) 9 juni 2019

No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.