(iii) Control of harbours, ports and territorial waters of the

territory and movements of vessels and aircraft;

(iv) Transport;

(v) Possession or control of property, undertaking or

employment;

(vi) Miscellaneous provisions;

(vii) Special offences and penalties;

(e) Emergency (Requisition) Regulations

These provide for the requisitioning of land other than property;

(f) Appointment of Places of Detention (Consolidation) Notice

This appoints certain sites, buildings and prisons as places of detention for the purposes of the Emergency (Deportation and Detention) Regulations.

31.

Article 6

No death sentence has been carried out in Hong Kong since November 1966. Instead, convicted murders have had their death sentences commuted, usually to life imprisonment, occasionally to determinate sentences of 20 years or more. The Administration regularly reviews the question whether the death penalty, although it has not been carried out for many years, should none the less be retained on the statute books in Hong Kong. So far the response of the majority of the community has been strongly in favour of retention. This being so, the Administration has no plan to abolish the death penalty at present.

32. As to the right of commutation after 1997, article 48, paragraph 12, of the draft Basic Law provides the Chief Executive with the power to pardon persons convicted of criminal offences or to commute their penalties. Article 56, paragraph 2, requires the Chief Executive to consult the Executive Council before making important decisions. The procedures for making decisions on whether or not to commute as laid down in the draft Basic Law therefore closely mirror the current situation.

Article 7

33. A review of the use of judicial corporal punishment in Hong Kong has now been completed. The review took into account a public opinion survey on the issue, a review of alternative punishments and Hong Kong's international obligations. It recommended that judicial corporal punishment should be abolished. This recommendation was endorsed by the Fight Crimes Committee and the Executive Council. The Hong Kong Administration is now taking steps to repeal all legislation giving the courts power to give sentences of judicial corporal punishment.

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