Popular opinion won't sway judiciary, says Chief Justice Geoffrey Ma Tao-li
Chief justice explains that principled approach is applied from the facts when making judgments

The job of Hong Kong's "fearless judiciary" is to reach well-reasoned - not popular - decisions on cases, even those covering controversial issues such as immigration, the city's top judge says.
In a public lecture at Chinese University yesterday, Chief Justice Geoffrey Ma Tao-li did not specifically refer to the right-of-abode case involving domestic helpers on which the Court of Final Appeal is due to deliver judgment on Monday.
The court must decide whether to entertain the government's request to seek clarification from the National People's Congress Standing Committee of the latter's power to interpret the Basic Law and of the standing of a peripheral statement the committee made in its 1999 interpretation on right of abode.
Its decision is likely also to affect children born in the city to mainlanders.
Ma touched on immigration issues twice.
"When one is dealing with, for example, issues involving freedom of expression or immigration issues, public controversy is almost certain to arise," he said.