
New Zealand judge gets nod from Hong Kong lawmakers to join top court
Hong Kong's legislature has endorsed the appointment of a 73-year-old
retired New Zealand judge to the city's top court, the first foreign non-permanent justice to join in over a year amid a number of recent resignations.
William Gillow Gibbes Austen Young, who retired as permanent judge of the Supreme Court of New Zealand in April 2022 after serving for 12 years, will join five other overseas non-permanent justices from common law jurisdictions at the Court of Final Appeal.
Chief Secretary Eric Chan Kwok-ki told the Legislative Council on Wednesday that Young had 'a high status and outstanding reputation'.
'His practice areas are very wide, covering criminal, competition law and taxation cases … [Young's] appointment will make a great contribution to the work of the Court of Final Appeal,' the No 2 official said.
Young is expected to begin his three-year term this month.
Chan added that the appointment of more non-permanent justices from common law jurisdictions would allow the apex court to handle different cases 'more effectively and flexibly' and ensure its 'effective operation'.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


South China Morning Post
an hour ago
- South China Morning Post
South Korea has a new president. Will it have a new China policy?
South Korea's new progressive president is likely to adopt a more 'prudent' stance on Taiwan than his predecessor and focus on boosting economic ties with Beijing , according to observers. But they also expect continuity in trilateral military cooperation with the US and Japan. Lee Jae-myung was sworn in after winning a snap election held on Tuesday, two months after his predecessor – Yoon Suk-yeol – was impeached and removed over his abrupt declaration of martial law in December. Lee and his progressive Democratic Party of Korea are largely regarded as more friendly towards China and North Korea compared to Yoon and his conservative People Power Party. The power shift has prompted speculation about a potential recalibration in Seoul's foreign policy towards the US and fellow American treaty ally Japan, as well as China and traditional adversary North Korea. . During his 2022 presidential campaign against Yoon , Lee faced criticism for describing US Forces Korea (USFK) as 'occupation forces' 03:17 South Korea's new president Lee Jae-myung vows to fix economy, hold talks with North Korea South Korea's new president Lee Jae-myung vows to fix economy, hold talks with North Korea Under Yoon, Seoul emphasised its commitment to the US alliance and stronger three-way cooperation with Washington and Tokyo in addressing security challenges outside the Korean peninsula. This included expressing concerns about People's Liberation Army activities in the Taiwan Strait and the South China Sea.


South China Morning Post
2 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Why China's leaders still seek a culture that is both modern and distinctly Chinese
Renowned historian Wang Gungwu's Roads to Chinese Modernity: Civilisation and National Culture traces China's transformation from an ancient civilisation into a modern nation-state shaped by revolution, reform and global engagement. Drawing on decades of scholarship and his unique perspective as an overseas Chinese intellectual, Wang reflects in this excerpt on Deng Xiaoping's legacy and the enduring challenge facing China's leaders today: how to build a modern national culture that embraces global ideas while remaining recognisably and distinctively Chinese. Advertisement The genius of Deng Xiaoping in 1978 was to see that China could not go down the road of revolution again. The word he used was 'reform'. By this, he was asking the Communist Party to recognise that the revolution had been successful in 1949; the time had come to consolidate what had been achieved by learning from the lessons and mistakes of the past. When Deng called for 'reform and opening up', there was a national sigh of relief. The idea of no more revolutions was something so welcomed by most people that it may be described as the secret of China's success in the decades that followed. What is still unclear, however, is whether the new generation of leaders are free of the idea that Chinese culture is holistic. When I talk about the quest for a new cultural identity, I am not certain whether the Chinese people have really moved away from the heritage of culture as a holistic unity. Why do I stress this? Because it is a new challenge to build a new culture that can stand by itself in the world today. Globalisation has made the world much smaller. New ideas are transmitted very rapidly. They include some of the most advanced ideas in science and technology, which all the Chinese admire and are willing to learn without any hesitation whatsoever. For many, this has demonstrated to them that globalisation has enabled the world to be one. There is a global process going on and one day, some kind of global culture that all human beings could subscribe to and believe in might be created. I am not yet sure if that is part of the popular vision among the Chinese today. There are many signs which suggest that the Chinese deeply hanker for the kind of civilisation they once had, of which they were so proud. I think that old cultural identity is truly gone. Advertisement But maybe some valuable parts of it could be recovered and given new life by incorporating new ideas that are coming from elsewhere. With new mixtures or compositions, China could build something that will be distinctively, if not uniquely, Chinese.


South China Morning Post
3 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Why is Hong Kong slow to tackle ‘ticking time bomb' of ageing water pipes?
Hong Kong authorities' hands are tied when it comes to tackling the 'ticking time bomb' of the city's ageing water pipes due to a lack of resources and resistance to disruptions to traffic and supply caused by replacement works, experts have said. Advertisement Experts and lawmakers told the Post that the city's high population density and ageing pipes have caused frequent water main bursts at housing estates in the New Territories in recent months, with incidents occurring at locations in Tuen Mun, Tseung Kwan O and Sha Tin as much of their infrastructure hits the 50-year mark. Between 2000 and 2015, the Water Services Department (WSD) conducted a citywide replacement and repair programme for 3,000km (1,864 miles) of the city's 5,700km fresh and salt water mains, targeting pipes that were about 50 years old. Such works cost HK$23.6 billion at the time, with the number of water main ruptures dropping significantly from more than 2,500 in 2000 to 27 in 2024. While the number of ruptures has dropped over the years, government data showed the average leakage rate for public housing estates and select private buildings had increased from 10.3 per cent in 2022 to 11.6 per cent in 2024. Advertisement The rate compares the sum of the volume of water consumed by all meters in a building against the master meter reading. The department said its goal was to reduce the leakage rate to 10 per cent or below by 2030 through the digitalisation of water supply services and the expansion of its 'water intelligent network' to monitor water flow and pressure.