rights and freedoms of Hong Kong inhabitants. Article 39 of the Basic Law pro-
through the laws of the HKSAR. The ICCPR, but not the ICESCR, was
Article 34. Intellectuals were severely suppressed and widely persecuted for their writings dur-
Article 35.
Article 37. The one-child policy in the PRC was lifted only in 2015.
Behind the Text of the Basic Law
197
ICCPR.
6
The PRC has ratified the ICESCR, but not the ICCPR. Article 39
further provides that any restriction of the rights and freedoms enjoyed by
Hong Kong residents shall be prescribed by law and shall not contravene the
ICCPR and the ICESCR as applied to Hong Kong.
Soon after the Basic Law came into effect, the Hong Kong Court of Final
Appeal, in a series of cases, laid down the general approach to the interpreta-
tion of the Basic Law. The courts must be vigilant in the protection of funda-
mental rights and should adopt a generous and purposive interpretation so as
to give full measures to individual rights. A literal, technical, narrow or rigid
approach should be avoided.
7
Any restriction on a fundamental right must be
narrowly interpreted and rigorously examined. Such restriction, in order to
pass muster with the constitutional requirements, must be prescribed by law
and satisfy the tests of rationality and proportionality. The burden of justifica-
tion of any restriction rests on the Government.
8
The Court of Final Appeal noted that a purposive approach to interpreta-
tion is necessary ‘because a constitution states general principles and expresses
purposes without condescending to particularity and definition of terms’.
9
Hence, ‘gaps and ambiguities are bound to arise and, in resolving them, the
courts are bound to give effect to the principles and purposes declared in, and
to be ascertained from, the constitution and relevant extrinsic materials’.
10
Not
only must the courts consider the purpose of the instrument, but it must also
interpret the language of its text in the light of the context, ‘context being of
particular importance in the interpretation of a constitutional instrument’.
11
In this regard, it is interesting to note the observation of Sir Anthony Mason, a
non-permanent judge of the Court of Final Appeal, made in an extra-judicial
lecture, that ‘the lack of a fully democratic universal franchise and the rela-
tionship created by the Basic Law between a strong executive government
and a weak legislature might suggest that the community and the media may
6
The substantive rights provisions of the ICCPR, with the exception of the right of a child to
a nationality and a replacement of ‘every citizen’ by ‘every permanent resident’ regarding the
right to vote and to stand for election, were reproduced in Part II of the Bill of Rights Ordi-
nance. Part II is known as the Bill of Rights. Reservations to the ICCPR that were entered into
by the United Kingdom upon ratification of the ICCPR were reproduced in Part III of the Bill
of Rights Ordinance.
7
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