Experts quit probe into police actions in blow to HK govt

Panel advising police watchdog cites doubts over its independence, investigative ability

Protesters and office workers marching in Causeway Bay, Hong Kong, yesterday. Since the protest movement started in June, police have fired 26,000 tear-gas and rubber-baton rounds at demonstrators, arrested more than 6,000 people and faced broad cond
Protesters and office workers marching in Causeway Bay, Hong Kong, yesterday. Since the protest movement started in June, police have fired 26,000 tear-gas and rubber-baton rounds at demonstrators, arrested more than 6,000 people and faced broad condemnation for perceived abuses. PHOTO: ASSOCIATED PRESS

HONG KONG • Foreign experts said they had quit advising a Hong Kong police watchdog yesterday due to doubts over its independence and ability to conduct an investigation into police conduct during months of anti-government protests.

The panel of five experts from Australia, Britain, Canada and New Zealand was recruited in September by the Independent Police Complaints Council (IPCC) to help ensure its probe into allegations of police brutality was credible and free of bias.

"We ultimately concluded that a crucial shortfall was evident in the powers, capacity and independent investigative capability of the IPCC," the foreign experts panel said in a statement.

"We remain committed to supporting and engaging with the IPCC, if and when it develops the necessary capabilities and provides its draft interim report on the protests, confrontations and policing of events between June and September 2019."

Sparked by a controversial and now-withdrawn extradition Bill, the often violent protests have morphed into calls for greater democratic freedoms and an end to alleged mainland Chinese meddling in the semi-autonomous former British colony.

The panel had included Mr Denis O'Connor, a former British chief inspector of constabulary, and Justice Colin Doherty, head of New Zealand's police watchdog, along with other current and former police officials.

The panel's resignation deals a further blow to the credibility of a police force that has seen its standing with the public fall sharply in the past year.

The panel had been advising on a report due next month on the allegations of police misconduct, but raised its concerns last month.

Since the protest movement started in June, officers have fired 26,000 tear-gas and rubber-baton rounds at demonstrators, arrested more than 6,000 people and faced broad condemnation for perceived abuses.

An independent investigation of police conduct is among the movement's key demands, resisted by Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam. She will be going to Beijing this weekend for regularly scheduled meetings with Chinese Communist Party leaders.

Pro-democracy lawmaker Tanya Chan said: "This is like a vote of no confidence. It will definitely affect the standard of the report."

Public satisfaction with the police force has fallen to the lowest on record, according to a poll released last month by the Hong Kong Public Opinion Research Institute.

The IPCC issued a statement thanking the panel for its work so far. It also acknowledged that it lacked investigative powers under its current legal framework and said it required the ongoing support of the city's political leaders and police chief.

"We hope to maintain close contact. The first stage of their work is basically over. The opinions they submitted will be reflected in the interim report," said IPCC vice-chairman Tony Tse.

REUTERS, ASSOCIATED PRESS

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on December 12, 2019, with the headline Experts quit probe into police actions in blow to HK govt. Subscribe