a few cases in which the Hong Kong courts were called upon to interpret the provisions of the
Letters Patent: see Peter Wesley-Smith, ‘Constitutional Interpretation’, in Peter Wesley-Smith (ed.),
Hong Kong’s Transition (Hong Kong: Faculty of Law, University of Hong Kong, 1993) 51, 69–70.
See generally Albert H. Y. Chen, ‘The Provisional Legislative Council of the SAR’ (1997) 27
tem’ in L. C. H. Chow and Y. K. Fan (eds.), The Other Hong Kong Report 1998 (Hong Kong:
The Constitutional Orders of ‘One Country, Two Systems’
239
of Rights Ordinance,
19
which incorporated into the domestic law of Hong
Kong the provisions of the ICCPR which had already been applied by the
United Kingdom to Hong Kong on the level of international law since 1976.
The Ordinance expressly repealed all pre-existing legislation that was incon-
sistent with it.
20
At the same time, the Letters Patent were amended to give
the ICCPR supremacy over future ordinances enacted by the colonial legisla-
ture.
21
As the Court of Appeal explained in 1994:
22
The Letters Patent entrench the Bill of Rights by prohibiting any legisla-
tive inroad into the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights as
applied to Hong Kong. The Bill is the embodiment of the covenant as applied
here. Any legislative inroad into the Bill is therefore unconstitutional, and
will be struck down by the courts as the guardians of the constitution.
The Bill of Rights and the corresponding amendment to the Letters Patent
inaugurated the era in Hong Kong’s legal history of judicial review of legisla-
tion on the basis of constitutional guarantees of human rights. The case law
developed by Hong Kong courts in this new era has been well documented.
23
It demonstrates that Hong Kong courts had already acquired considerable
experience in judicial review of the constitutionality of legislation when the
HKBL came into force in July 1997. They had introduced into Hong Kong
constitutional law basic principles of such judicial review, such as the princi-
ple of proportionality and the need for government to justify a restriction of a
guaranteed human right.
One of the earliest and most celebrated cases decided under the Hong
Kong Bill of Rights in the 1990s was R v. Sin Yau-ming, decided by the Hong
19
Chapter 383, Laws of Hong Kong. See generally Raymond Wacks (ed.),
Hong Kong’s Bill of
Rights (Hong Kong: Faculty of Law, University of Hong Kong, 1990); Johannes Chan and Yash
Ghai (eds.), The Hong Kong Bill of Rights: A Comparative Approach (Singapore: Butterworths
Asia, 1993); Raymond Wacks (ed.), Human Rights in Hong Kong (Hong Kong: Oxford Univer-
sity Press, 1992).
20
Section 3 of the Ordinance.
21
The amendment related to article VII of the Letters Patent. See Chan and Ghai, Supra note
19, 539–40.
22
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: