Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor speaks during the Chief Executive's Question and Answer Session at the Legislative Council in Hong Kong on Feb 4, 2021. (EDMOND TANG / CHINA DAILY)
Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor expects closer cooperation with the Legislative Council for the remainder of her administration’s term to face the daunting challenges ahead, which include reviving a battered economy and improving people’s living standards.
During a question-and-answer session in the city’s legislature on Thursday, Lam said that now the legislature has resumed functioning normally, she hopes it will continue to work in coordination with the executive by providing checks and balances.
Without a functioning legislature that works with the government, many bills the government planned to present lately would not previously have a chance to be brought in, Chief Executive Carrie Lam said
Without a functioning legislature that works with the government, many bills the government planned to present lately would not previously have a chance to be brought in, the city’s leader said.
Lam said the government will propose five legislative amendments this year, which include requiring district councilors to swear allegiance to the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region.
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The draft amendment of the oath taking requirement is expected to be put in front of lawmakers for deliberation after the Lunar New Year. Lam said draft work on the legislation has entered the final stage.
She added that the government will rigorously follow up on breaches of oaths after the implementation of the arrangement, noting that the handling of district funds in the past year by some councilors was “far from satisfying”.
Since assuming office at the end of 2019, some opposition district councilors were criticized for abusing public resources to serve their political purposes.
According to an investigative report released by the District Councils Observers watchdog organization in December, some councilors from the opposition camp used public funds to favor organizations set up by the camp, and support activities advocating radical political ideas. The District Councils Observers was set up by the Democratic Alliance for the Betterment and Progress of Hong Kong, the city’s largest political party.
READ MORE: CE: District councilors should be required to take oath
The government is also considering introducing a legislative amendment to empower the city’s privacy watchdog to carry out criminal investigations into doxxing activities, which saw the personal data of hundreds of police officers, members of the judiciary, and residents and their family members being leaked because they had a different political viewpoint during the year long social unrest.
This would give the Office of the Privacy Commissioner for Personal Data statutory powers to demand the removal of doxxing content from social media platforms or websites.
Another amendment the government will propose is to allow qualified overseas-trained doctors to practice in Hong Kong to ease an acute shortage of doctors needed to treat the aging population.
Those eligible doctors need to be Hong Kong permanent residents, with a recognized overseas medical degree, and won’t be permitted to go into private practice once they get approval to practice in Hong Kong.
Other amendments include introducing rent control of sub-divided residential units, and enhancing fire safety in old buildings.
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