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Prohibition on Face Covering Regulation

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Prohibition on Face Covering Regulation
The Chief Executive in Council
CitationCap. 241K
Territorial extentHong Kong
Enacted byThe Chief Executive in Council
Enacted5 October 2019
Commenced5 October 2019
Status: Not fully in force

The Prohibition on Face Covering Regulation (Cap. 241K) ("PFCR") is a regulation prohibiting the wearing of face coverings in certain circumstances made by Chief Executive in Council under the Emergency Regulations Ordinance due to the 2019–20 Hong Kong protests[1] The Court of First Instance heard applications for judicial review from 24 members of the Legislative Council (LegCo) and Leung Kwok-hung, a former LegCo member, submitted in early October.[2] On 18 November it ruled that both the prohibition on the wearing of masks and related powers granted to the police to enforce it are inconsistent with the Hong Kong Bill of Rights, whilst leaving the question of relief to a future hearing.[3][4] On 22 November the court declared the PFCR invalid and of no effect, but suspended the application of that declaration till 29 November 2019.[5] The government appealed the decision on 25 November to the Court of Appeal,[a][6] which partially allowed the government's appeal: the prohibition of masks at unauthorised assemblies was ruled to be constitutional, but not compulsion to remove them or the prohibition of masks at authorised assemblies.[7]

Provisions of the PFCR

The regulation contains six sections.[1] Section 1 provides for the citation of the PFCR,[8] and section 2 some definitions.[9]

Section 3 prohibits the use of "any facial covering that is likely to prevent identification" at unlawful and unauthorised assemblies, and public meetings and processions as defined by the Public Order Ordinance (POO).[10] In the POO, the terms “public meeting” and “public procession” have their plain meaning;[11] an assembly is unauthorised under the POO where it is a public meeting or procession not granted permission by the Commissioner of Police,[12] or any other public gathering in contravention of a direction made by the Commissioner in that connection or an order to disperse.[13] Persons who contravene this prohibition are liable on conviction to a fine at level four (HK$25,000)[14] and imprisonment of one year.[15]

Section 4 allows for two defences: first, in the case that a mask was worn with lawful authority, and, second, if worn with a reasonable excuse.[16] Reasonable excuses envisaged include but are not limited to wearing masks for professional reasons, religious reasons, or pre-existing health reasons.[17]

Section 5 provides that a police officer may require a person to remove a face covering in order to identify them.[18] If that person refuses, an offence is committed punishable with a fine at level 3 ($10,000)[19] and imprisonment of 6 months;[20] moreover the police officer may forcibly remove it,[21]

Section 6 requires that any prosecution for any offence created by the PFCR shall not commence more than 12 months after its occurrence.[22]

Judicial review

The Court of First Instance (CFI) ruled that the granting of powers to the Chief Executive in Council on an occasion of public danger by the ERO was unconstitutional, and, therefore, that the entirety of the PFCR was unconstitutional because it was in exercise of those powers.[23] On separate grounds it also declared all the substantive sections of the PFCR excepting that prohibiting the use of masks at an unlawful assembly inconsistent with the Basic Law and the Bill of Rights, and therefore of no effect.

The Court of Appeal ruled that the ERO was in fact constitutional on occasions of public danger, and therefore that the PFCR was not invalid on those grounds.[24] It additionally held that section 3(1)(b) of the PFCR, which prohibited masks at certain "unauthorised assemblies", is proportionate, and therefore valid, but upheld the decision of the CFI that the PFCR is invalid insofar as it prohibits masks at authorised assemblies and meetings.[25]

Reactions

Initial reaction

In response to the government's implementation of the law, a speech by Edward Leung in a televised debate during the 2016 Legco election was widely shared on the internet: “a few years ago, Ukraine passed an anti-mask law. Do you know what happened in Ukraine? A revolution started in Ukraine. You want to do it? Do it, we will fight till the end.”[26]

Court of First Instance ruling

The central government immediately criticised the Court of First Instance's ruling, causing concern for the independence of Hong Kong’s judiciary.[27]

In response, the government said that it would stop enforcing the ban for the time being.[28][29][30] A spokesman from the Chinese legislative affairs commission, however, stated that "Whether the laws of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region comply with the Basic Law of Hong Kong can only be judged and decided by the standing committee of the National People’s Congress".[31]

Court of Appeal ruling

A commentary in the state-run China Daily said that the Court of Appeal's partial allowing of the government's appeal "strengthens the rule of law", though criticised it for allowing those at permitted assemblies to wear masks.[32]

Notes

  1. ^ The Court of Appeal is the second highest court in Hong Kong; appeals may only be made to the Court of Final Appeal. Applications for judicial review were initially made to the Court of First Instance. The Courts of First Instance and Appeal collectively constitute the High Court.

References

  1. ^ a b Cap. 241K
  2. ^ Kwok et al., HKCFI 2820/2019, at para. 10
  3. ^ Kwok v. CE, HKCFI 2820/2019, at para. 193
  4. ^ "Hong Kong court rules face mask ban unconstitutional". DW. 18 November 2019. Archived from the original on 19 November 2019.
  5. ^ Kwok v. CE, HKCFI 2884, at para. 193
  6. ^ Kwok v. CE, HKCA 192/2020, at para. 7
  7. ^ Lau, Chris; Siu, Jasmine; Lum, Alvin (9 April 2020). "Hong Kong mask ban legal when aimed at unauthorised protests, Court of Appeal rules in partially overturning lower court verdict". South China Morning Post. Archived from the original on 16 April 2020.
  8. ^ Cap. 241K
  9. ^ Cap. 241K
  10. ^ Cap. 241K
  11. ^ Public Order Ordinance (Cap. 245) § 2(1)
  12. ^ Public Order Ordinance (Cap. 245) § 2(1)
  13. ^ Public Order Ordinance (Cap. 245) § 17A(2)
  14. ^ Criminal Procedure Ordinance (Cap. 221) Schedule 8
  15. ^ Cap. 241K
  16. ^ Cap. 241K
  17. ^ Cap. 241K
  18. ^ Cap. 241K
  19. ^ Criminal Procedure Ordinance (Cap. 221) Schedule 8
  20. ^ Cap. 241K
  21. ^ Cap. 241K
  22. ^ Cap. 241K
  23. ^ Kwok Wing Hang and others v Chief Executive in Council and another, HKCFI 2884/2019, at para. 42
  24. ^ Kwok et al., HKCA 192/2020, at para. 353
  25. ^ Kwok et al., HKCA 192/2020, at para. 192
  26. ^ Cheng, Kris (5 October 2019). "Crowdfunding campaign for jailed activist Edward Leung's appeal surpasses HK$350,000 goal within 15 minutes". Hong Kong Free Press HKFP. Archived from the original on 8 December 2019. Retrieved 22 November 2019.
  27. ^ Lau, Chris (20 November 2019). "Explainer: Why Beijing's angry reaction to the Hong Kong High Court's mask ban decision prompts fears it will overturn ruling". South China Morning Post. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020.
  28. ^ Hong Kong’s High Court rules anti-mask law unconstitutional Archived 2019-11-19 at the Wayback Machine, HKFP, 18 Nov 2019
  29. ^ People free to wear masks again: govt Archived 2020-04-20 at the Wayback Machine, RTHK, 18 Nov 2019
  30. ^ Ban on masks must follow legal process Archived 2020-04-15 at the Wayback Machine, SCMP, 18 Nov 2019
  31. ^ "Hong Kong courts have no power to rule on face mask ban, says China". The Guardian. 19 November 2019. Archived from the original on 19 November 2019. Retrieved 22 November 2019.
  32. ^ Kwok, Tony (15 April 2020). "Judgment on mask ban strengthens rule of law". China Daily. Archived from the original on 21 April 2020.

See also