Hong Kong’s next chief justice: call to cast the net wider, consider top legal brains who are not sitting judges
- Search panel urged to keep an open mind, look at non-judges who can initiate change
- More names tossed up, though judge Andrew Cheung is considered front-runner

The panel looking for Hong Kong’s next chief justice is being urged to consider candidates other than serving judges to bring fresh insights to the judiciary.
“Veteran lawyers like Wong Yan-lung and Rimsky Yuen Kwok-keung, who have rich experience in the administration of justice and dealings with the judiciary, are also suitable candidates,” the source said.
Senior counsel Wong, 56, was secretary for justice from 2005 to 2012. Yuen, 55, is also a senior counsel and former Hong Kong Bar Association chairman, and was secretary for justice from 2012 to 2018.
Those in favour of extending the search beyond sitting judges point to Australia, where Tom Bathurst was a barrister before being made chief justice of New South Wales in 2011, and Singapore, which in 1990 appointed banker Yong Pung How, a lawyer by profession, its chief justice.