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Hong Kong's judicial system: the last defender of the
people 2.
Opponents upset by tourism chief's support for 'superjail'
plan
1. Hong Kong's judicial system: the last defender of the people SCMP,
19 May 2003 Where
can Hong Kong people look for accountability of the government, its ministers
and bureaucrats? Clearly, they cannot look to Chief Executive Tung Chee-hwa to
make ministers accountable to principles, rather than to his own whims and preferences.
The scandal surrounding Financial Secretary Antony Leung Kam-chung and the purchase
of his new Lexus, and episodes such as the hounding of academic Robert Chung Ting-yiu
by another of Mr Tung's personal appointees, demonstrate that. Constitutionally,
Mr Tung is accountable to the central government and the National People's Congress,
not Hong Kong people. Central government officials are unlikely to abandon their
man. Loss of face is more important than the quality of leadership in Hong Kong.
What, then, of
Legco. It showed last week that the people cannot look to it to hold Mr Tung accountable.
That is hardly surprising, given the narrow interest groups - often with their
eyes on contracts and other state favours here or on the mainland - which have
the balance of power in the unrepresentative chamber. But all is not lost. Hong
Kong's judicial system is one of the few institutions which has gained in public
esteem. For all its flaws - costs and archaic procedures among them - it has enhanced
its reputation since the handover. Elsewhere,
judicial activism can run to ridiculous extremes - but in Hong Kong, where other
restraints on bureaucratic and corporate power are so weak, its potential is clear
and needs to be developed by public action. One
of the more encouraging signs was a Court of Final Appeal judgment last year rejecting
the appeal of a senior government official convicted of the common law offence
of misconduct in public office. The official had failed to disclose his interests
when steering some contracts to a company - controlled by a close relative - which
was not properly qualified for the work. The common law offence is very broad,
but the court accepted that the offence "is necessarily cast in general terms
because it is designed to cover many forms of misconduct on the part of public
officers". It was not necessary to prove the officer personally benefited
from his misconduct, only that the misconduct was wilful and serious. This
judgment was important and sweeping. Hopefully, the law will be applied again
by the government against its erring officers. Failing that, cases should be brought
by the public. The
ruling should also have made Mr Tung sit up. Did he disclose the large interest
of the Li Ka-shing family-owned companies in his own family's shipping company
prior to the Pacific Century Group being awarded the Cyberport contract on favourable
terms without going through any of the normal tendering procedures? Was this not
partial behaviour and damaging to the public interest? At
the very least, at the civil law level, the owners of non-subsidised competing
office space could argue that the partiality amounted to misconduct by the government
in general, if not by any particular individual. The
prison term of former legislator Gary Cheng Kai-nam, found guilty of abusing his
power, may also seem unduly harsh, given the general past tolerance of failure
to reveal conflicts of interest, particularly in cases where public servants move
on to become executives of large companies for whom they had previously made favourable
decisions. A more frequent problem than partiality is the secrecy and stubbornness
demonstrated by the bureaucracy. Hopefully, the challenges are just beginning.
Judgment is awaited in the case brought to prevent government-ordained reclamation
of the Wan Chai waterfront, which opponents say is contrary to the Protection
of the Harbour Ordinance. Whatever the result, it is at least encouraging that
the court was willing to hear a case which challenges such unaccountable institutions
as the Town Planning Board. Next on the list of projects hatched in quiet corners
between ambitious bureaucrats and developers could be the plan for a $16 billion
prison on Hei Ling Chau. The
fundamental issue with this and other schemes advanced in the name of progress
is the secrecy with which they are moved forward and the lack of public discussion
of alternatives. Behind most secrecy lies a desire not to speed up decision-making,
but to avoid light shining on cronyism. Misconduct
in public office can also be as much about omission as commission. Deliberately
failing to carry out one's duty as an official for fear of being disadvantaged
is also a matter which should be brought to the attention of the courts. For example,
as Kevin Sinclair has pointed out repeatedly in the South China Morning Post,
land use regulations mean nothing in much of the New Territories thanks to the
unwillingness of officials to take on local vested interests. In
the private corporate sector, it is encouraging to see shareholder activist David
Webb draw attention to the conflicts of interests among board members of many
listed companies and the abuse of rights to place shares in favour of those close
to management, resulting in the dilution of interest of outside shareholders .
There is a huge problem here, given shareholder lethargy and the preference of
the stock exchange and the Securities and Futures Commission to protect the interests
of issuers and managements against those of the investing public. But here again,
there is potential to use the courts to redress the balance. The principle of
breach of trust towards shareholders at large is as fundamental to private corporate
governance as misconduct in public office is to civil servants. Likewise,
without wishing to encourage a culture of blame, there needs to be readier access
to redress for victims of government and corporate failure due to negligence and
wilful avoidance of public or corporate responsibility. Could the Sars outbreak,
and Amoy Gardens in particular, provide impetus? Unfortunately,
the cost of bringing action against directors of the many listed companies in
Hong Kong who have exploited their outside shareholders has deterred activism.
The exploiters have the money to defend themselves, the victims are too impoverished
to fight. Like libel suits, the cost of civil law provides a means by which corporate
knaves and crooks can deter honest reporting of their activities. But
the instruments do exist, and a public deprived of democratic means of enforcing
accountability on government should redouble its efforts to use the one choice
still left. Philip
Bowring is a Hong Kong-based journalist and commentator.
2. Opponents upset by tourism chief's support for 'superjail' plan HEIKE
PHILLIPS, Environment Reporter, SCMP 19 May 2003 A
tourism chief's support for a $12 billion "superjail" to be built on
Hei Ling Chau has shocked opponents who had hoped for support from the tourism
sector to stop the development. The
Living Islands Movement, a residents' group formed three weeks ago, has called
for a $7 million feasibility study approved by Legco's Finance Committee on Friday
to take into account the island's value as a potential tourism destination. But
the suggestion has been shrugged off by Selina Chow Liang Shuk-yee, chairwoman
of the Hong Kong Tourism Board and a member of Legco's security panel and Finance
Committee, where she has been vocal in her support for the project. "When
we look at land use in Hong Kong we have to look at the entire picture. No doubt
Hei Ling Chau would have been quite a good choice for tourism, but there are other
sites as well. We're talking about competing land uses," she said yesterday.
The facility
on Hei Ling Chau would house about 7,000 prisoners, replacing eight prisons. Tom
Masterson, a spokesman for the Living Islands Movement, said the group was "very
disappointed" that Mrs Chow had voted for the project without considering
the tourism potential of Hei Ling Chau. The
island has also been identified by a University of Hong Kong study as one of only
70 ecological hot-spots in Hong Kong. Another
member of the residents' group, Neil McLaughlin, said: "[Mrs Chow] was quite
strident in her support for the proposal, and it was notable that at no point
was any reference made to the impact on tourism. "If
the government is only going to look at the potential for building a prison at
Hei Ling Chau, then quite apart form the environmental degradation of such a project,
they are failing to capitalise on a natural asset that could be a tourism attraction
in its own right." Sannie
Chan Lit-fong, chairwoman of the Green Peng Chau Association, was also disappointed
at the lack of support for developing the island and neighbouring Peng Chau's
tourism potential. "But
I am not surprised, since [Mrs Chow] is a member of the security panel. I also
talked to members and staff of the Tourism Board and when I spoke about eco-tourism
they didn't really pay attention. No one seemed to know what I'm talking about,"
she said. Mrs
Chow, meanwhile, also dashed residents' hopes that the first stage of the study
would engage the public in the process or seek alternative sites for the prison.
"I think
[public consultation] will come at the end of the consultancy study," she
said, adding that a debate in the Legislative Council on finding the right location
for the prison had gone on "quite long enough". "I
really don't think this first study is about a choice of land use, but it is a
first step towards construction of the prison, to see what the effect will be
on the environment and to put forward a more structured plan." A
preliminary study, costing $7 million, is expected to focus on land use and planning
issues. This
will be followed by a $40 million engineering and design study, funding for which
hinges on the outcome of the first study and a second round of voting in the Legislative
Council. James
To Kun-sun, a legislator and Finance Committee member, said yesterday the first
study would determine whether Hei Ling Chau was a suitable location. "My
understanding is that this study will look only at Hei Ling Chau and not investigate
other sites. The study will put forward options to the government and on the basis
of the information we receive we will decide if further research can be done [for
the prison to be built at Hei Ling Chau], or if other sites should be considered,"
he said. The
chairman of the Finance Committee, Philip Wong Yu-hong, refused to speak to the
Post yesterday to clarify the committee's decision.
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