Strip Hong Kong chief executive of university powers, outside panel recommends
The panel tasked with reviewing
how the University of Hong Kong is run has recommended stripping the city’s
leader of powers he or she currently enjoys, of appointing top council chairs
and its members, according to a source.
Citing a report circulated to the
university’s governing council on Tuesday, the source said the panel suggested
the role of chancellor – which Leung Chun-ying currently holds by default, as
Hong Kong chief executive – be made honorary.
That would mean the chief executive would not be able to appoint the
council’s chair and members, or confer honorary degrees, said the source, who
requested anonymity to share the information. Those responsibilities would fall
to the council. William Cheung Sing-wai,
chairman of the HKU Academic Staff Association, said that it was “a good
start”.
At least we will not have direct
political interference,” he said.
But he pointed out that the chief
executive could still exercise power, with many current council members
pro-Leung.
“The current chairman and six
members are appointed by the chief executive. Six more are appointed by the
council, which is essentially chairman Arthur Li Kwok-cheung’s decision,” he
said. Li is widely regarded as a strong ally of Leung’s.
Cheung also expressed concern the
recommendations would not be accepted.
“Whether or not these suggestions
will be implemented also depends who becomes our next chief executive,” he
said.
HKU established the independent
review panel in April last year amid intensifying debate over public
universities’ governance structures.
Critics have argued that a
politically conservative chief executive could use the system and his or her
influence over the universities’ councils to stifle liberal views and threaten
academic freedom.
The panel consisted of Professor
Sir Malcolm Grant, chancellor of the University of York; Professor William
Kirby, T.M. Chang Professor of China Studies at Harvard University; and Peter
Van-tu Nguyen, a former High Court judge.
The review report was expected to be completed by the end of 2016 but
was only submitted to council this week.The council will discuss it at its
meeting next Tuesday.
Even if the council accepts the
recommendations, such changes would need to be passed by the HKU court, the
chancellor and the Legislative Council.
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