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The Weekly Round-up: Dominic Cummings, Hong Kong, and Immigration Law Challenges

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In the news

It emerged this week that Dominic Cummings drove 250 miles from London to Durham with his wife and child to be with his parents, while his wife was experiencing symptoms of COVID-19. In so doing, Mr Cummings appears to have flouted the government guidance of which he was one of the architects. Leading Tory MPs have called for the Prime Minister to sack Mr Cummings, but he has refused to do so, saying that Mr Cummings “followed the instincts of every father and parent”, and “has acted legally, responsibly, and with integrity”.

Apparently in response to the incident, a rogue Civil Service employee tweeted from the official Civil Service Twitter account “Arrogant and offensive. Can you imagine having to work with these truth twisters?” The Tweet was swiftly deleted, and a Cabinet Office investigation is under way into how it was released.  

The situation in Hong Kong has escalated again this week, as Beijing gears up to enact Article 23 of the Basic Law, Hong Kong’s ‘mini-constitution’ of 1997, and impose national security laws to prohibit “treason, secession, sedition [and] subversion”. Protesters have been out in force in defiance of coronavirus restrictions, and police have repeatedly made use of tear gas, pepper spray, and water cannons. Notably, protesters have started to call for full independence for Hong Kong, which has not previously been one of the pro-democracy movement’s official objectives.

The authorities have indicated that the proposed national security laws would include offences such as defacing the national flag, and it is likely that they would be weaponised against political dissidents as they have been in mainland China. Passing these measures would also allow Beijing to install its own national security agencies in Hong Kong. Carrie Lam, the Chief Executive of Hong Kong, supports Beijing’s decision to bypass the Hong Kong government in imposing these measures.  

The move has been condemned in a statement signed by senior foreign policy officials and politicians from 23 countries. According to signatories, “it is the genuine grievances of ordinary Hong Kongers that are driving protests. Draconian laws will only escalate the situation further, jeopardising Hong Kong’s future as an open Chinese international city.” Likewise, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo says this is a ‘death knell’ for Hong Kong’s autonomy – and therefore for the special economic status which it enjoys with the USA.

In Hungary, the national Parliament has voted to put an end to legal recognition of trangender people. A law has been passed which defines gender as based on chromosomes at birth, so it will no longer be possible for trans people to alter gender and name on official docs. This comes as part of a wider anti-LGBT agenda on the part of Viktor Orban’s far-right government, and will exacerbate the discrimination and prejudice faced by transgender people in Hungarian society.

In the courts

There were two noteworthy cases in the Family Court this week:

There were two significant immigration law challenges, one successful and one not:

There was also a decision on the award of costs for intervening in the Court of Appeal:

On the UKHRB

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