Law Professors Fabio Morosini and Michelle R. Sanchez-Badin examine empirical data from Chinese investments in Brazil’s energy sector and find many similarities between China and Brazil in their choice of legal tools. What really sets China apart is the size of its economy, and therefore the greater impact its actions have on the existing legal order.
This Week in Asian Law
USALI’s weekly round-up of legal news from Asia. This week’s highlights include: China launches a National Database of Laws and Regulations; Hong Kong’s chief executive says the electoral system needs reform; Japanese officials say China’s new Coast Guard Law is escalating tensions; South Koreans are accusing sports and entertainment celebrities of having been bullies at school; some academics in Taiwan call for stiffer punishment of professors who take unauthorized grants from China.
This Week in Asian Law
USALI’s weekly round-up of legal news from Asia. This week’s highlights include: China and Hong Kong take BBC World News off the air, Hong Kong Bar Association and immigrant protection groups express concern over proposed change to immigration rules, Japan’s new COVID-19 measures face pushback, South Korea considers introducing a system to register births to resident foreigners, Taiwan may enshrine animal rights in its constitution.
Event Recording: China’s Overseas Investment and Environmental Accountability
This Week in Asian Law
Event Recording: China and the WTO
Hong Kong: The End of Delusion
As the Hong Kong and Beijing governments continue their assault on civil society in the territory — through tactics ranging from arbitrary arrests and attacks on the legal profession to the gutting of liberal studies and the inculcation of loyalty to the CCP in the guise of "patriotism," neither "China experts" at large, nor professedly left-leaning academics, have engaged in any critical self-reflection on their culpability in Hong Kong's demise, writes Alvin Y.H. Cheung.
This Week in Asian Law
USALI’s weekly round-up of legal news from Asia. This week’s highlights include: China’s judicial interpretation of the Criminal Procedure Law; Hong Kong’s pro-democracy movement is nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize; Japan to fine COVID restrictions violators; South Korea impeaches a sitting a judge for the first time; Vietnam concludes its Communist Party Congress by giving General Secretary Nguyen Phu Trong an unprecedented third term.
China Brief: The Rollback of Human Rights and the Rule of Law in Hong Kong
Event Recording: US-Asia Relations in the Biden Administration
Event Recording: Making Hong Kong China
The people of Hong Kong riveted the world’s attention in 2019 by pouring into the streets to demand the autonomy, rule of law, and basic freedoms they were promised. Beijing responded on June 30, 2020, by imposing a new National Security Law aimed to snuff out protests. We will hear from Michael Davis, who has taught human rights and constitutional law in Hong Kong for over three decades and is the author of the recently published book, Making Hong Kong China: The Rollback of Human Rights and the Rule of Law.
This Week in Asian Law
USALI’s weekly round-up of legal news from Asia. This week’s highlights include: China’s congress releases seven draft laws or amendments for public comment; China says it will not recognize BNO passports held by Hong Kong residents as travel documents; Japan’s ruling party drops the idea of criminally prosecuting non-cooperative COVID-19 patients; a North Korean ambassador defects to South Korea; South Korea’s Constitutional Court allows a controversial new corruption investigation body to stand; Taiwan’s Judicial Yuan is accused of lowering ethical standards as judges are implicated in a corruption scandal; Vietnam’s Communist Party general secretary maneuvers for a third term.
This Week in Asian Law
USALI’s weekly round-up of legal news from Asia. This week’s highlights include China’s legislature considers a draft Legal Aid Law; civil servants in Hong Kong are required to sign a loyalty pledge; Japan’s Cabinet approves giving the government more powers to fight Covid-19; North Korea seeks to impose a penalty for anyone caught enjoying South Korean entertainment; Taiwan’s Supreme Court remands the criminal case against eight Sunflower movement activists to the High Court for retrial; a record number of delegates to attend Vietnam’s National Party Congress.
This Week in Asian Law
USALI’s weekly round-up of legal news from Asia. This week’s highlights are : China’s Communist Party issues a Plan on Building Rule of Law (2020-2025); Hong Kong’s new chief justice talks about impartial adjudication; Japan proposes criminal penalties for COVID-19 patients who refuse hospitalization; a Korean court confirms former President Park Geun-hye’s sentence; Taiwan’s judicial corruption case; and concerns from the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights over Vietnam’s imprisonment of three journalists.
Nikkei Shimbun: Have Prosecutors Changed?
This Week in Asian Law
USALI’s weekly round-up of legal news from Asia. This week’s news is led by a fascinating sample of cases in which Chinese courts are already applying provisions of the new Civil Code. Other highlights: Hong Kong police arrest 53 pro-democracy activists pursuant to the National Security Law; Japan witnesses a record high number of changed gender registrations; a Korean court orders Japan to pay damages to “comfort women”; Taiwan faces calls to limit the collection and use of data from its cell-phone based COVID quarantine system. Vietnam sentences three independent journalists to more than 10 years in prison for criticizing the government.
Politico China Watcher: "China 2021: Experts make their one big prediction"
The Asia Pacific Journal: Comparative Reflections on the Carlos Ghosn Case and Japanese Criminal Justice
The arrest and prosecution of Nissan executive Carlos Ghosn, together with his dramatic flight from Japan, have focused unprecedented attention on Japan’s criminal justice system. This article employs comparison with the United States to examine issues in Japanese criminal justice highlighted by the Ghosn case.
This Week in Asian Law
December 12-18
China
The southeastern province of Yunnan recently passed an AIDS-prevention regulation that authorizes medical institutions to inform the spouse or sex partner of someone found to be HIV-positive if the infected person fails to do so. In this article, legal experts respond to concerns about whether the regulation violates privacy rights. (in Chinese)
China’s Supreme People's Court has appointed four senior African legal experts to a 24-member Expert Committee of the China International Commercial Court, which hears international commercial disputes related to the Belt and Road Initiative. Matthew Erie, an associate professor at the University of Oxford said the move “sends a strong signal that China’s new outward-looking court is inclusive” in an effort to offer alternatives to international dispute resolution options.
China’s Supreme People’s Procuratorate (SPP) published a 28-article document to guide prosecutors as they to implement the “plea for leniency” system. The document was issued in response to the opinions of the Standing Committee of the 13th National People's Congress when it reviewed an earlier SPP report on the implementation of the system. The document provides guidance about protecting the rights of defendants, exercising prosecutorial discretion, enhancing communication with defense lawyers, improving prosecution sentencing suggestions, and so on. (in Chinese)
The China Law Society published its Annual Report on China’s Construction of Rule of Law for 2019. The 12-part report addresses achievements and problems with respect to rule of law in the fields of legislation, supervision, political and judicial reform, administration, adjudication, human rights protection, intellectual property protection, ecological protection, legal education, research and publicity, etc., as well as international cooperation and communication. (in Chinese)
OutRight Action International has issued a report exploring the relationship between law and the lives of LGBT people in China, and the Chinese LGBT movement’s efforts to make law a force for greater equality rather than one that entrenches stigma. The report, titled “Precarious Progress: Advocacy for the Human Rights of LGBT People in China,” is written by Darius Longarino a China scholar based at the Paul Tsai China Center of Yale Law School.
Since the 2012 Criminal Procedure Law legalized the police practice of detaining suspects in locations other than their homes or official detention centers (known as “residential surveillance in a designated location” or RSDL), China has been criticized by U.N. human rights experts for allowing what amounts to a form of incommunicado detention. The China Human Rights Lawyers Concern Group here responds to a recent defense of RSDL by the Chinese government. Separately, Zhu Yonghui, a Chinese defense lawyer at King and Capital Law Firm, also urged authorities to abolish RSDL in remarks made at a recent lawyers forum. (in Chinese)
A Tianjin man, Yang Songfa, who spent 19 years behind bars for an intentional homicide that he did not commit, was exonerated this week. The Tianjin High People’s Court overturned the original conviction and suspended death sentence and acquitted him after a retrial found insufficient evidence to support his conviction 17 years ago. Yang’s conviction was based on his coerced confession after a 48-hour interrogation and questionable physical evidence.
The Chinese Communist Party’s recently released Implementation Outline for the Establishment of a Rule of Law-Based Society (2020-2025) has been translated into English by China Law Translate, which also wrote its own Highlights of the Outline.
Children who are sexually abused face special obstacles in persuading the courts to grant damages for mental and psychological injuries, according to Beijing’s Qianqian Law Firm, which specializes in such cases. Researchers at the firm recently analyzed 184 child sexual abuse verdicts and shared their findings.
Hong Kong
Hong Kong human rights advocates and lawyers are warning that the Immigration (Amendment) Bill 2020 could deny victims of persecution access to an interpreter and other due process protections. The bill is part of the government's ongoing effort to control what it says is abuse of the city's non-refoulement system, a quasi-asylum system.
Hong Kong officials pledged allegiance to the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, vowing to uphold the Basic Law at an oath-taking ceremony. Civil servants who joined the administration since July 1, after the enactment of the region’s new national security law, are required to make such declarations. As of June 30, there were about 177,300 civil servants in Hong Kong, accounting for 4.6 percent of Hong Kong's workforce, media reported.
A Hong Kong magistrate acquitted a social worker accused of obstructing police after viewing video evidence that showed the defendant being cooperative. The defendant was accused of pushing a constable twice during an anti-government demonstration in Hong Kong last year as officers were escorting arrested protesters to police stations for further investigation.
Hong Kong approved 1,310 applications for interception and 25 applications for covert surveillance in 2019, according to an annual report to the chief executive by the Commissioner on Interception of Communication and Surveillance (ICSO). Only four out of the 1,314 applications were denied last year due to insufficient supporting documents. In 2018, 1,378 cases were approved out of 1,384 applications.
Ten of the 12 Hong Kong activists who were arrested at sea in August while trying to flee to Taiwan have been charged with illegal boundary-crossing offenses. Another two, who are juveniles, are due to have a separate, closed hearing into their cases, but no charges have been announced. Relatives of the accused made a plea to be informed of the timing of the trials and whether they can attend.
Japan
Japan’s Supreme Court Grand Bench has been asked to decide three cases challenging the constitutionality of provisions in the Civil Code and the Family Register Act that require shared surnames for married husband and wife. The plaintiffs, three couples in common-law marriages living in Tokyo, claim that the provisions violate the constitution’s guarantee of equality and marital freedom. In 2015, the Grand Bench confirmed the constitutionality of the Civil Code provision, ruling: “It is reasonable to set one surname as the name of the family, which forms a basis of society“.
The Supreme Court affirmed a Tokyo High Court ruling that ordered the Japanese government to pay 768 million yen in noise pollution damages to residents living near the U.S. military’s Yokota Air Base in western Tokyo, but rejected plaintiffs’ demand that late-night and early-morning flights be suspended. In 2017, the Tokyo District Court’s Tachikawa branch held the government responsible for failing to prevent noise pollution from the base. The appellate court upheld the ruling and ordered the government to pay damages.
The Supreme Court also upheld a Tokyo High Court ruling holding the central government responsible for failing to prevent health damage to construction workers who inhaled asbestos. The decision means the government must pay compensation totaling about 2.28 billion yen ($22.1 million) to 337 former construction workers and bereaved family members in the Tokyo metropolitan area. The ruling could affect 17 other lawsuits related to illnesses, such as mesothelioma and lung cancer, caused by inhaling asbestos in the workplace. The Supreme Court has not yet ruled on the plaintiffs’ request for damages from construction materials manufacturers.
The notorious “Twitter killer” who killed and dismembered nine people, eight of them female, was convicted by a Japanese district court and sentenced to death. Takahiro Shiraishi approached victims via Twitter and offered to assist them with their suicidal wishes. Shiraishi pleaded guilty and said he would not appeal his death sentence, despite his lawyer’s argument that he simply assisted the victims’ suicidal wishes.
Koreas
Vice Minister of Gender Equality and Family Kim Kyung-sun said some types of hate speech are already punishable under existing South Korean laws. She spoke at an online briefing about a ministry-sponsored bill that would explicitly ban hate speech against particular cultures, ethnic groups, and countries. The bill lacks a punishment clause, but the minister said serious levels of hate speech may already be deemed in violation of a criminal code ban on insults, and may be punished by fines or even prison time.
South Korea’s legislature has amended the Law on the Development of Inter-Korean Relations Act to criminalize sending anti-government leaflets and propaganda into North Korea. Such actions are now punishable by up to three years in jail or a fine of nearly $30,000. The ban has sparked widespread criticism in Korea and internationally as likely to have a chilling effect on access to information and freedom of speech. Korean activists have vowed to defy the law and fight it in court.
North Korea has adopted a new law against “reactionary thoughts” that strengthens the state’s controls over the flow of information both domestically and across the border. The law reportedly defines a wide range of acts as illegal, including: listening to, recording or distributing foreign radio radio broadcasts; importing and distributing “impure” foreign recordings, video content, books, or other published materials; and copying or distributing music unapproved by the state. Early this year, North Korean authorities issued an order to intensify the management of electronic devices in order to stop information flow in and out of the country.
South Korea’s National Labor Relations Commission has ruled that the Korea National Ballet was unfair when it dismissed a dancer who violated the company’s self-quarantine rule, and ordered the troupe to reinstate him. While acknowledging that the dancer violated his obligations to the dance company by traveling abroad during the home-quarantine period, the commission said the dance company abused its disciplinary power because the dancer did not violate the government’s quarantine rules. The ballet company is challenging the decision in court.
The ruling Democratic Party of Korea has proposed a “Prosecutor Appointment Reform Act” requiring prosecutor appointees to have at least 5-year legal experience. It is the latest in a series of controversial changes to the country’s prosecutorial system being proposed by the ruling party against strong opposition from other parties. (in Korean)
The Korean Bar Association held an online discussion about how to implement and improve the right of suspects to take notes during their own investigation and interrogation. The “self-defense notes,” a notebook that allows suspects to record information while being investigated by the police and prosecution agencies, is an innovation of the Seoul Bar Association in collaboration with the National Police Agency, and has been adopted around the country. Although criminal suspects have the right to a lawyer, in practice many lack representation. Allowing suspects to take their own notes is viewed as a means of protecting their rights. (in Korean)
Taiwan
More than 100 domestic workers from Southeast Asia countries called for better legal protection during a rally in front of the Legislative Yuan in Taipei. Their requests included equal application of wage and hour regulations, better occupational injury compensation and retirement benefits. As of the end of October, about one-third of the 700,000 migrant workers in Taiwan were employed in the household service sector, according to the Ministry of Labor. Under Taiwan law, migrant domestic workers are not eligible for overtime wages, severance pay, occupational injury compensation, or retirement benefits, according to Migrants Empowerment Network in Taiwan, a migrant rights advocacy group.
The Nationalist Party (KMT) has accused the Taiwan government of attempting to control free speech on the Internet with its draft Over-the-Top Media Services Management Act. Among other things, the act drafted by the National Communications Commission would impose a fine of up to NT $1 million for online content that it deems harmful to national security, public order, or good morals.
The Executive Yuan has voided provisions of the Criminal Code and Criminal Procedure Code that criminalized adultery in light of an earlier Constitutional Court Interpretation (No. 791) that declared the provisions unconstitutional. The original Criminal Code provision allowed both parties in an adulterous relationship to be prosecuted and imprisoned for up to one year. A clause in Article 239 of the Criminal Procedure Code stated that “the withdrawal of a complaint against a spouse shall not be considered to be a withdrawal of a complaint against the other adulterer.” The Executive Yuan plans action on two other Criminal Code provisions in response to another Constitutional Court Interpretation. (Chinese)
Vietnam
Police have arrested a popular Facebook user for allegedly publishing posts against the state. Truong Chau Huu Danh, who has nearly 168,000 followers on Facebook, will be detained for three months for posts deemed illegal. Facebook has been under government pressure to censor more local political content. So far this year, Facebook has removed 2,311 posts and 290 fake personal accounts that violated Vietnamese laws from its platform, a 400-percent increase compared to the whole of last year.
Event Recording: Trends in the Innocence Movement in Asia and the U.S.
Please join us for a discussion of recent developments in "Innocence" work in Asia and the United States. Experts from China, Japan, Taiwan and the U.S. will discuss significant trends in exonerating the innocent with special panels focusing on the exclusion of junk science from evidence and the positive and negative roles played by prosecutors, that is, sometimes supporting exonerations and contributing to wrongful convictions.