04/26/2003
South China Morning Post
Page 5
Lawyers yesterday urged the government to suspend deliberation of draft
national security laws until the atypical pneumonia outbreak has stabilised,
saying the crisis has further reinforced the need for clarity in the
legislation.
The Article 23 Concern Group, consisting of four former Bar Association
chairmen, two legislators and legal and human rights academics, also expressed
disappointment at the way the Legislative Council Bills Committee was handling
the bill.
Chinese University professor Michael Davis said it was inappropriate for the
government to continue to insist on swift passage of the bill while it had
urgent matters such as the health and economic impact of the outbreak on its
hands.
University of Hong Kong Law Faculty dean Johannes Chan Man-mun SC said the Sars
crisis made it more important to clearly define notions of "national security".
"Sars indicates that what started as a health issue became one with economic
implications, international implications - to what extent would the spread of
information on Sars come under the purview of this legislation?" Professor Chan
asked.
Former Bar chief Ronny Tong Ka-wah SC said he was disappointed at the lack of
adequate opportunities for the public and experts to voice their views.
"One of the goals of Legco should be to go through in-depth, thorough
discussions on the issue and understand how the law affects various groups such
as the media, librarians, authors, Falun Gong-type groups," he said.
"Five minutes of time per group at public hearings just isn't enough."
Alan Leong Kah-kit SC, also a former Bar chief, said he would spend his five
minutes criticising the legislators' handling of the bill on behalf of the
Article 23 Concern Group, as the time was hardly sufficient for substantial
discussion.
Independent legislator Audrey Eu Yuet-mee SC said many legislators had one
mission, to pass the bill through as fast as possible.
"They want lots of meetings very often - despite the fact that there is so much
the government and members have to handle with Sars and other urgent matters ...
we have 49 members, but how many show up and how many ask constructive
questions?" she said.
"International experts have offered to share their expertise but I have to
apologise to them and say Legco is not interested and only has five minutes'
time for you."
Former legislator and think-tank head Christine Loh Kung-wai added: "At the
moment the entire executive structure is overwhelmed by the Sars crisis. What
they should do is deal with Sars and come back to this. There is no need to push
legislation past in July."
The group has also released 40,000 copies of a "user's guide", entitled "Why the
Blue Bill is Not Good Enough", for distribution to schools, through the Law
Society and the Bar Association offices, and at Legco.
It includes a form for people to send to their Legco representatives listing
their concerns about the laws.
SCMP (South China Morning Post) is a prominent Hong Kong-based English-language
newspaper