Police vague about whether anti-Occupy Central officers breached code
The force quotes Basic Law in reply to questions of whether anti-Occupy officers have broken its code of conduct by signing petition

Police management offered no clear answer yesterday on whether officers who signed an anti-Occupy Central petition ran afoul of the force's code of conduct by compromising its perceived neutrality.
The force also stopped short of offering a promise to keep from using pepper spray or a higher degree of violence than what was applied at the July 2 Chater Road sit-in to remove protesters who did not resist arrest.
Asked if off-duty officers could sign the petition, acting director of operations Cheung Tak-keung said officers "should be politically neutral at all times".
"But according to the Basic Law and the Bill of Rights Ordinance, all Hong Kong residents enjoy the freedom to express their views, and this of course includes police officers," he said.
Police General Orders state that an officer should abstain at all times from any activity likely to interfere with the impartial discharge of his duties or anything likely to give rise to the impression that it might interfere.