Exclusive | Book on Hong Kong judiciary stalled ‘because chief justice is worried about past scandals involving judges’
- Historian submitted manuscript in 2016, but there has been no news on publication
- Courts say project is ‘ongoing and under consideration’, and book will appear ‘in due course’
A new book on the history of the Hong Kong judiciary has been in cold storage apparently because Chief Justice Geoffrey Ma Tao-li is worried that tales of the scandalous behaviour of some colonial-era judges may reflect badly on the institution, the Post has learned.
Historian Christopher Munn was commissioned by the judiciary in 2013 to write its history from 1841, when the first magistracy was set up, to the period after Hong Kong’s return to China in 1997.
He finished work in late 2016 and submitted his manuscript, which was also translated into Chinese. Sources said Munn was paid in full for his work.
Then, nothing happened.
A spokesman for the judiciary said: “The project on the history book of the Hong Kong judiciary is ongoing and any details concerned are still under consideration.”